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February 27, 2025 110 mins
Jake Tapper promoting his new book. Oscar-winning actor Gene Hackman, wife found dead in Santa Fe home. Nationwide economic blackout on Feb. 28 aims to clapback at major corporations backtracking on DEI. Jeffrey Epstein flight logs and files listing ‘a lot of names’ to be released. Trump says US will sell $5 million ‘gold card’ to wealthy foreigners. Egg-flation. Texas child is first reported US measles death in a decade as outbreak hits more than 130. Social media promoting communism and socialism. Amazon unveils new version of Alexa. North Korean hackers pull off the biggest heist of all time, stealing $1.5 billion in crypto. 
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

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

Speaker 2 (00:14):
If you go to a dictionary and you open it
up and you look up the word hypocrisy currently and
it changes quite a lot, you will find a picture
of Jake Tapper surrounded by many in the media. And
the reason I bring that up is because the balls

(00:35):
to put out a new book and we'll get to
that in a second, and what it's called the cajones
to do it, you'd have to have a wheelbarrow to
carry those around. Why you say, because while they're running

(00:56):
around going, oh, I can't believe so and so is
being kicked out of the House press, Cory Trump is
trying to control the media. Blurdy freaking blarin all of
this stuff. These are the same people who knew sums
out right with the president. But yet the minute you

(01:21):
brought it up, you were attacked and Jake led the
charge in many cases, Sit back, relax and enjoy this.

Speaker 3 (01:29):
How do you think it makes little kids with stutters
feel when they see you make a comment like that.

Speaker 4 (01:33):
It's very clearly a cognitive decline, That's what I'm referring to.

Speaker 1 (01:37):
It makes me uncomfortable.

Speaker 5 (01:39):
You are.

Speaker 3 (01:41):
It's so amazing, it's so amazing to me that trying
to figure out an answer cognitive Declineative Biden embraces his
stutter talking about it, while Trump, mox said, exaggerates it,
belittles it. False claims to The Wall Street Journal about
President Biden's mental fitness and acuity quote behind closed Doors
Biden's shows signs of slipping. The Wall Street Journal is

(02:03):
owned by News Corp, which is run.

Speaker 6 (02:04):
By the Murdocks.

Speaker 3 (02:05):
Beyond the headline, there is some critical nuance here. The
article is mostly based on observations of Republicans, with former
Speaker Kevin McCarthy the only one going on the record.
They do note in the article that most of the
criticism comes from Republicans. Have you heard any concerns from
anyone who has met with President Biden about seeming a

(02:25):
little slower?

Speaker 2 (02:26):
Now the Russians are trying to.

Speaker 3 (02:28):
Do to make us in the public not trust the
our election integrity. Joe Biden has dimensioned.

Speaker 2 (02:34):
All this stuff, all this stuff, all this stuff that
everybody saw, and Jake Tapper, you were absolutely leading the charge.
That's why I say the fact that you have a
new book out about the cover up is insane. Again,

(03:05):
the wheelbarrow for your Cojones.

Speaker 3 (03:08):
Alex Thompson of Axios Sinai have spent the last several
months talking to more than two hundred insiders and officials
and donors and activists more willing to talk post election,
of course, to explain the last couple of years in
politics and how we as a nation got here. With
never before heard stories from behind the scenes, you will

(03:30):
not believe what was really going on. You can pre
order the book at Original sin book dot com Original
sin book dot com dot com.

Speaker 2 (03:40):
Yeah, the original sin was yours.

Speaker 7 (03:45):
This was.

Speaker 2 (03:47):
One of the biggest stories, and you guys didn't cover
because you were part of the resistance and in your mind,
anything to stop Trump in a weird way, though you
don't want to stop him because you like the ratings

(04:09):
he was bringing you at times and oh my god,
he kept us relevant. But the original sin you the
media is there to do what And I'm not talking
I'm talking to the establishment unity, the establishment news. If

(04:31):
you're a journalist, you're supposed to be unbiased. Absolutely, we
know you're not, and we're okay with that. You're supposed
to be there though, reporting and anytime somebody brought something

(04:52):
up to you, whether it was you, or the Morning
Joe's of the world, anybody else. It was like, he's
the greatest, never seen anybody do it better, not as
fast as he used to be. Can only juggle four
chainsaws at once. Now it was so sad. You were

(05:13):
supposed to be there as the first line of defense
from the BS and you failed. The original sin was that,
And shame on everybody else out there in the journalistic
quote unquote world who refused to do the right thing,

(05:37):
not even like even for a selfish reason, going you
know what, I could be the next Woodward in Bernstein.
It could be I could do this and it could
be awesome. People know me no, And the ones that
did say something, well, they got shouted down. So even
worse was the fact that if you brought anything up

(05:59):
and you had some serious questions that inside of these
quote unquote news organizations, they shot you down. But now
that it's all behind you, let's profit on it. The
number one sin, if you will, that this book should
put out is you and your failure. Either you're the

(06:26):
dumbest individual and you really thought he's just stuttering, because
that's what stutterers do. They forget where they are. They
can't hold a conversation. They can't remember people's names. Uh All,
jim O over there stutters so much he can't remember

(06:48):
where he is and anybody's name. Like, what kind of
stutter is that? It's called the dimension stutter. And so
when you preach from your moral mountain, on your high
horse about all of the stuff and how you're protecting
our republican the democracy and freedoms, you might want to

(07:11):
remind yourself you took away freedoms from a lot of
people by not reporting the truth and putting our nation
in a situation where you had unelected officials running things.

(07:34):
So that right there is the original sin man, the
balls on that guy. Meanwhile unelected officials doing things. Oh yeah, Elon.

Speaker 8 (07:51):
So I'm going to ask if it's possible to have
Elon get up first.

Speaker 9 (07:55):
Elon Musk didn't have a seat at the table at
President Trump's first cabinet meeting, the world's richest man sitting
off to the side, still Trump making it clear Musk
is the MVP calling on him first.

Speaker 2 (08:08):
You got called on first? How about that? Elon? What
do you have to say?

Speaker 10 (08:13):
Thank you, miss President.

Speaker 11 (08:14):
The overall goal here with the Dose team is to
help address the almost episode. We simply cannot sustain the
country two trillion dollar deficit the interest rates, just the
interest on the national debt now it seeds the defense
sppment spending.

Speaker 2 (08:30):
We spend a lot on the defest department.

Speaker 11 (08:33):
But if we're spending like an over trillion dollars on interest,
if this continues, the country will become an impact of macroft.
It's not an optional thing. It is a central things.
That's the reason I'm here.

Speaker 2 (08:47):
It's going to happen, is what he's saying, what we've
been saying forever. It's gonna happen. How long will this last?
Until it doesn't, well, until it doesn't is coming. And
the thing is, until it doesn't is kind of avoidable.

(09:07):
The problem is people want to avoid stuff without pain,
and that is for the most part unavoidable.

Speaker 11 (09:16):
And taking a lot of platt and getting a lot
of death threats, by the way, I'd like to stuck
them up. But if we don't do this, America will
go bankrupt. That's why it has to be done. I'm
confident at this point.

Speaker 10 (09:31):
Knock on, would you know, block of my wooden head.
It's got a lot of word there that we can
actually find con.

Speaker 2 (09:40):
Trillion dollars in savings, a trillion because it used to
be two trillion. Now it's down to a trillion because
he realizes you're not getting two trillion out of this,
which we knew was going to be tough for them
to do. Anyways, the whole thing yesterday was again it
was part cabinet meeting, part per formative, part kind of

(10:04):
press conference, and it was again it's it's refreshing to
see the President and any of the cabinet and everybody
talking to the media and not being afraid. I like that.
I mean, do I think you know, you guys know
how I feel. I don't think the Doge is gonna
get done all the things that the people want to
have happened. But at the end of the day, it

(10:28):
is a great way to expose the insanity of government
and all the whiless the media reports. Again, well it's
Doge and it's evil and it's bad, and he's mean
and Trump and blah blah blah blah. I remind you,
these are the same people that told everybody that Biden
was phenomenal, great, maybe a little slower physically, but mentally

(10:49):
he's pretty damn good. He's great, and then they're writing
books about how mentally he wasn't there? Oh my god,
way do you guys hear the story? The story that
everybody knew. So maybe the Russians help you write that book,
or maybe the Republicans help you write that book. Maybe,
good God three, two three, five, twenty four to twenty
three Atch had Benson Show is your Twitter? Tweet at
us text the program. A lot of stuff to get

(11:11):
to today, including the loss of an absolute legend was
announced earlier, looked like it happened yesterday though, Gene Hackman,
how about more live Now?

Speaker 6 (11:28):
Wasn't enough?

Speaker 12 (11:29):
Hay, wasn't now?

Speaker 5 (11:31):
This girl?

Speaker 1 (11:32):
You want another alive?

Speaker 3 (11:34):
That takeway?

Speaker 2 (11:37):
This's my favorite Gene Hackman role side and adventure right there.
We'll talk a little bit about that. Bunch of other
stuff to get to Gavin Newsom's new podcast hah ha,
some Monica Lewinsky stuff as well. It's gonna be a
good one, kids, Get ready for it. Birch gold Gold's
importon Is there gold in them there?

Speaker 13 (11:55):
Hills?

Speaker 2 (11:56):
There needs to be gold in your portfolio? Why is that,
you say? Because great way to protect yourself in inflationary situations.
Of course you know that. It's also great way to
diversify again, you know that. But it's a safety net
in times where people get nervous, in times where things
are uncertain, in times where there's a weakening currency i e.

(12:19):
The Dollar, the potential for things to get sideways globally,
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(12:40):
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Speaker 14 (12:41):
Kid.

Speaker 2 (12:42):
Let you take a look at everything. No heart pressure,
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Speaker 1 (13:10):
Chad Benson.

Speaker 15 (13:13):
Gene Hackman's road to acting started in the nineteen fifties
the California's Pasadena Playhouse, where he was voted least likely.

Speaker 2 (13:20):
To succeed what's my name, Goyle what?

Speaker 15 (13:23):
But he went out to win the Oscar for Best
Actor in nineteen seventy One's the French Connection.

Speaker 5 (13:27):
I want to hear it.

Speaker 2 (13:28):
Come on, yes, I've you betten that right?

Speaker 1 (13:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (13:30):
An incredible variety of roles followed the Poseidon Adventure, Oosiers, Unforgiven,
and of course the Superman film. Says Lex Luthor, I
don't ye as Kryptonizerperman, little souvenir for the old hometown.

Speaker 6 (13:45):
I've spent no expense to make.

Speaker 2 (13:46):
You feel right at home.

Speaker 15 (13:47):
Hackman retired from acting after two thousand and four. Is
welcome to Mooseport. There was also a successful novelist.

Speaker 2 (13:54):
Ninety five. His wife and dog were also dead, probably
carbon monoxide poisoning. I love Hackman. He was tough and
at the same time could be a bit humorous. And
if you are to do the mount Rushmore of acting

(14:18):
American actors, definitely one of the people you think, all right,
He's absolutely in the discussion. Deva obviously, Paccino, de Niro,
and we're just talking about men here. So ladies settle down,
because let's be real. If it's the ladies it's Meryl

(14:39):
Streep and then we go from there. He talked about
what it was like to not only be an actor,
but to live out his dreams and the fact that
he was all over the place.

Speaker 16 (14:55):
You people ever get what they really want in life.
You give up a lot in terms of family and
one thing. You're always in North Africa or Spain or someplace.
But it's a make believe world. And as I say,
it's it's what I wanted to do as a child,
and I fulfilled a.

Speaker 2 (15:17):
Lot of my dreams, which he did. I mean he
and think about too. This is the one thing you know.
He did a lot of Westerns, which is ask any
any boy, and any any boy that's an actor, they
always want to do a Western at some point in time.
Chance to dress up like a cowboy? Oh, sign me up?
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three

(15:39):
at Chad Benson Show. That is your Twitter, your Instagram.
Check out Chad Benson Show TV as well on YouTube,
like and subscribe right here on The Chad Benson Show.
He also talked about the fact that he wasn't always
the easiest to work with Little Gruff, So I suppose.

Speaker 16 (15:56):
Some of that I give off a kind of an
aura of the difficult or whatever, but I mean, no,
that is just the kind of way it happens. So
that's what I require to do the work.

Speaker 2 (16:09):
We've got a lot of good stuff coming up today,
a lot of good stuff. Talk a little bit socialism
because there's socialist influencers, which I find fascinating because they're
not influencing on things built by socialism. That makes sense,
a bunch of other wacky interesting things to get to,
ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls. Want to talk to

(16:29):
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Speaker 17 (17:38):
Chop Sun Chad Benson Joe, the Chat Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (18:04):
Hey everybody, just a reminder tomorrow it is don't spend
any money day. Did you guys know that?

Speaker 12 (18:11):
In case you haven't heard, this, coming Friday is a
total economic blackout. The idea here is that we as
normal people. We do have power, and the power is
through our dollars. So you spend zero dollars on Friday
February twenty eighth, you don't go grocery shopping, you don't
get gas, you don't buy anything on Amazon, you don't

(18:31):
go to fast food, you don't go to Starbucks. You
literally spend zero dollars this coming Friday for a full
twenty four hours.

Speaker 2 (18:40):
What if I have a coupon and I have to
use it that day? Well, hmmm, lady, what if I've
got a cooping it's buy one, get one free, and
I need it, but it expires?

Speaker 17 (19:01):
What if?

Speaker 2 (19:03):
Chad, stop with your what ifs. I'm just saying, what
if I need medicine or something of that nature. These
are things that I am trying to find out about.
I need clarity.

Speaker 12 (19:22):
Again, this is Friday, February twenty eighth.

Speaker 9 (19:24):
There's going to be more.

Speaker 12 (19:25):
Of these, but this is the first major one. So
I hope you'll be willing to participate because we do
have power. The power is through our.

Speaker 2 (19:33):
Wallets, all right, So that's tomorrow. Don't spend money tomorrow.
That's what it should be called. Jonathan Schwartz put together
as the founder of the People's Union USA. Well, that
sounds like, I'd say, very capitalistic society, pro capitalism. Anytime
there's a peoples and a union, probably going to be

(19:54):
a little left leaning, he says. I'm not involved with
anybody's whatsoever. It's a grassroots movement paid for by a
bunch of other people, I'm sure, uh, And it's all
about resistance, government accountability and corporate reform. I wonder what

(20:19):
I wonder like, when you think corporate reform, what exactly
are you looking for in the corporate reform world, Because
there's we're going to talk about it next hour. There's
a whole bunch of people out there that are socialist
and communist influencers with hundreds and thousands and some of
the millions of followers who preach utopia and you know

(20:45):
aren't aren't a fan of the capitalistic world. But when
you talk about reform, I'm curious about, like, Okay, what
do you mean by capitalist or reform? Explain that to
why corporate reform? What does that look like? Because that
sounds scary from a lot of these people who want that,

(21:07):
because the goal is let's take all the power away
from corporations. And give it to the government, and that's
not a good thing. So, like I talked yesterday, we
did the whole thing about DEI with Costco, and I'm
like that, if you're going to do DEI, that's the
way you do it. First of all, they've had it

(21:29):
since essentially the inception of the company. But it was
all about a meritocracy. Meritocracy, meritocracy. What are the merits
of you getting this position? And you had to prove
yourself and they trained you and they found something in you.
And if you've ever been to Costco, you all know

(21:49):
they don't hire idiots. They pay their people well, So
I'm just I'm curious. Again, I have no problem with it.
I don't do boycotts, and I tell everybody that you
guys know this. I don't do boycotts. I boycott boycotts.
And the only time I will go to a boycott

(22:13):
is never, So keep that in mind. Although I will
boycott your boycott if you cause me traffic. So you
come out on a freeway somewhere holding up some stupid
ass sign for Palestine or climate change or whatever stupid

(22:38):
thing that you're pitching that hour, I will tell you this,
right now I will go to a counter protest against
you for pissing me off. Will we get the list?
What list? Mister Benson Epstein's list?

Speaker 13 (23:00):
And while we have you here, I want to ask
you about the news that Attern General Pambondi said she
hopes to release the flight logs and obviously more information
related to Jeffrey Epstein in all of the files today.
Do you expect any new information from what we already know.
I know a lot of people are looking forward to this.
I know Senator Marshall Blackburn has been pushing for this

(23:20):
for months and was always shot down by the Biden administration.

Speaker 18 (23:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 19 (23:24):
I think this is great. This is a huge step
towards transparency. Donald Trump said he was going to be
transparent with the American people. Our House Oversight Committee created
a task force to try to get more of what
we call American secrets out in the public. The American
people deserve to know who was on that Epstein list
and whether or not our government was spying on people

(23:46):
and allowing this to happen to get leverage where people
being blackmailed. This is a national security concern. So I
applaud Pambondy for releasing this later on today, and I'm lucky.
I'm going to learn a lot once those names are
made public.

Speaker 2 (24:03):
I'm curious to you know, somebody asked me, how like
is this really important? What's important? Isn't whose names are
on the list? I mean, yes, there's some importance to that,
but I think we know a vast majority. And remember
your name being on the list. It could have happened

(24:26):
long before he was arrested the first time. It could
have happened in a situation, because it's all about the
flight logs. Well, if you flew from Cleveland and did
an event in say, Kansas City on his plane and
he flew back, I just you know, the island thing's

(24:49):
totally different. But why it's important is the transparency. Every
time we take a step closer to me or transparent
with the American people, that is a victory right there,
because I don't how complete is the list? Are we

(25:11):
going to start arresting these people? I think there's a
lot of Republicans. I'm sure that are probably on the list.
I think there's probably a lot of stars. Are we
going to find out the truth? Outside of that? That
was he a person who had a lot of dirt
on people and sold to the highest bidder the dirt

(25:32):
to get them to do whatever they need done. I
don't know a no idea, but I think the transparency
side is super important when it comes to the people us.
We need transparency. I mean, we're talking about the measles
you guys know there's a measles outbreak. We've got a

(25:55):
death already, and what's going on with things like vaccines, misinformation, disinformation, hesitancy,
a lot of that. Why because people don't trust this
virus is not under control yet.

Speaker 3 (26:13):
We have an amazing vaccine MMR, which is safe and
effective and provides ninety seven percent lifetime protection from just
two doses.

Speaker 2 (26:22):
But people are nervous now. I also think it's being
a little bit overblown because the area of which this
is happening in particular, is in an area where there's
a lot of Mennonites, and they're not anti vacs. They
just don't go to the doctor. That's kind of their thing,

(26:42):
and neither are the Homage. By the way, They again
just don't go to the doctor. So it's not a
anti vax or something like that, it's just something they
don't do on a regular basis, But how do we

(27:02):
get here in a bigger way? Misinformation, disinformation and no trust.
So yeah, I think the Epstein thing is important, but
I think more so for the American people on the
trust side as much as whose name's on there. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show,

(27:25):
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Speaker 1 (28:49):
Irreverence, Like, yeah, so what it's the Chat Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (28:54):
We need to change the conversation.

Speaker 20 (28:56):
And that's why I'm launching a new podcast and this
is going to be anything but the ordinary politician podcast.
I'm going to be talking to people directly that I
disagree with, as well as people I look up to.
But more important than anything else, I'll be talking directly
with you, the listener, real conversations. What's going on with
the cost of eggs, what are the impacts real impacts

(29:18):
to you around tariffs? What power does an executive order
really have? And what's really going on inside of dotch Look,
there's an onslaught of information that we take in, so
let's take it to the sources without the typical political
mumbo jumble. In the first few weeks, we're going to
be sitting down with some of the biggest leaders and
architects in the Mega movement.

Speaker 2 (29:40):
This is Gavin Newsom. Wow, that sounds awful. Hey, guys,
trying so hard. Who do you look up to? Gavin?
Honest to god, people I look up to. I'm going
to interview me. There's a podcast. He is trying already.

(30:00):
He's like, all right, what's going on? All right? So,
so everybody went to the podcast world and to the
other media to get elected President Trump and the likes,
so I should head there because the the other one,
the other lady, the lady, the lady that ran. She didn't.

(30:21):
We'll call her Kamala. Yeah, she didn't. So she avoided
all the things except for a few like call her
daddy and we'll get to that in a second. So
Gavin's going to do his own podcast, so we'll see,
you know what, Get Steve Bannon on, get all of
the peeps on, have conversations. I love it absolutely, and

(30:46):
I think the more that you can have on people
you don't agree with or because you're going to find out.
First of all, we always say don't agree. Vast majority
of people agree with a lot of even if they're
on polar opposites of some of the big issues. But

(31:07):
outside of that, you know, we all agree we want,
you know, good schools and safe neighborhoods and you know
stuff like that. I mean, you know, we want mostly
the same things outside of again, the two insane extremes.
So it'll be interesting to see how this plays itself

(31:29):
out because he's going to try to reshape himself if
he wants to run for president, because I think he
thinks he's got a wide open field at this moment
in time. I think he thinks, well, you know what,
now is the time, and I'm gonna take it and
I'm gonna run with it. Okay, good luck to you.
We'll see how it goes. Speaking of podcasts, is it

(31:53):
Call Call Her Daddy Call? Is that the name of
the podcast? I think it is. It's the one that
Kammily went on where she ended up paying god knows
how much to build the set had. Monica Lewinsky on
Very Interesting.

Speaker 21 (32:12):
Was very quickly painted as a stalker, mentally unstable, not
attractive enough.

Speaker 4 (32:17):
If you were twenty two years old, he was forty nine,
you were an intern.

Speaker 2 (32:22):
He was the president of the United States.

Speaker 21 (32:24):
Because of the power dynamics and the power differential. I
never should have been in that position. There was so
much collateral damage for women of my generation to watch
a young woman to be pilloried on the world stage,
to be torn apart from my sexuality, for my mistakes,
for everything I was in my early thirties, I have nothing.

(32:49):
That was the point when I realized how much had
been taken from me. I lost my.

Speaker 2 (32:53):
Future, you know what. That was at a time too
when if you're in a situation like that, now you
can take that because of social media and turn it
into something huge. That was at the time where you
were just the scarlet letter and that was it. There

(33:14):
was no situation where you had your side, the opportunity
to tell your side, the opportunity to be to be,
you know, really a person, no matter again, the whole
we all remember what happened, We all know what took place.
But that was at a time where the likes of

(33:39):
in particular Hillary and the people around Bill destroyed women.
She wasn't the first, not at all. The difference was
he was president. The other ones they went after, they
came out after he was running for president. In the

(34:02):
sense that. You know, people knew who they were in Arkansas,
but it blew up when he became president and they
had an operation where they went and destroyed these women,
and they didn't have the recourse they do now nowadays,
you can take it straight to the podcast world, where
a situation like this, every giant podcaster is going to

(34:23):
give you an opportunity to reach millions upon millions of
people and tell a different side of the story. Instead,
the media, through the Clinton's pressure and the machine that
they were, shaped the story about this lady, this young
girl at the time, and you know, everybody cleaning myself,
you know, everybody poked fun and stuff. There was no

(34:43):
other side of it. We mostly poked fun at Hillary
going well, yeah, I mean look at her and look
at her, so you see where we're going with this.

Speaker 21 (34:50):
The right way to handle a situation like that would
have been to probably say it was you know, nobody's
been business and to resign, you know, or to find
a way to find a way of staying in office
that was not lying and not throwing a young person

(35:14):
who was just starting out in the world under the bus.

Speaker 2 (35:17):
That was never gonna happen, and this wasn't even so
much about Bill as it was Hillary, as we see
the other half can also crave that power, if you
know what I mean. Three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show, your Twitter,
your Insto, Graham and everything else right here on The
Chad Benson Show coming up hour two. Man, so much

(35:42):
stuff still to get to Epstein the list or we're
going to get some of it. What's it look like?
You got to go through it. What's redacted? What's not redacted?
Obviously there's going to be stuff redacted when it comes
to the victims, So that's something you don't get in.
You don't get to know their names. If they want

(36:03):
to tell you, that's fine. Plus Trump. One of the
things we didn't get to yesterday the gold card. You've
heard of a yellow card or red card that's in soccer.
Green card, Well, we know what that's about. What the
hell's a gold card. We'll talk a bit about that
as well. If you miss any of the show, grab
the podcast. It is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (36:23):
This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (36:53):
You know what's interesting this bizarre situation where nobody understands
how government works, including most Americans. Hell, there are people
that go into government, get to DC and have no
idea how half of it works. And partially, and I

(37:14):
think a big part is because we were lied to
by Schoolhouse Rock. We were yeah, you realize. The other
day they passed essentially a wants list blueprints of the

(37:37):
budget only a few months late, and everybody's well, now
it goes to the Senate. It doesn't actually go to
this The Senate's already kind of passed their own thing
what they want money for Ukraine and some other stuff.
But it will go there eventually. It's the next place
it goes after it goes to committees, because now the
committees are told, hey, weighs and means, folks, you've got

(38:02):
to deal with this, so figure it out. And then
you go to somebody else and say, hey, such and
such committee you need to deal with this, so figure
it out, cuts whatever it is, and then everybody comes
back together, we put the puzzle back, and then we
ship it off. Oh yeah, so that's we're going to
cut medicaid.

Speaker 4 (38:23):
Oh jeez, we've seen the blowback that some Republicans in
your caucus worried about these cuts are worried about what
Doge is doing. Do you have concerns that that's anything
that Democrats will be able to use to run against
those Republicans?

Speaker 22 (38:37):
No, because no I don't, because the videos you saw
of the town halls were for paid protesters in many
of those places. These are Democrats who went to the
events early and filled up the seats if you would
if the videos had panned, you can't argue they were all.

Speaker 4 (38:49):
Paid protesters, though, mister speaker, many one are your acknowledged.

Speaker 22 (38:53):
They were his constituents, one Republican and now they were constituents.
That's fantastic, okay, But they had Democrats come and fill
the seats early.

Speaker 4 (39:01):
All right.

Speaker 2 (39:03):
It's Mike Johnson right there, Caitlin Colin, their devilish smile,
and a lot of them were I don't want to
say paid protesters. I mean, but they were organized and
brought to so they could go complain. None of these
people were supporters of Trump, None of these. I mean,

(39:23):
you might get one or two, but a vast majority
of them weren't. They were there, and people who go
to mostly who go to town halls go to bitch,
so they do take away dog people still go to bitch.

Speaker 22 (39:37):
This is an old playbook that they pulled out and
ran and it made it look like that what is
happening in Washington is unpopular. But I'm going to tell you, Caitlin,
the American people are behind what's happening. The Doge efforts
is pulling over eighty percent right now. They want us
to find efficiencies in the federal government. They want the
government to be smaller and leaner and more accountable to
the taxpayers. And that's what these efforts are all about. Well,

(40:00):
that's what the Republican Party is about. That's what our
commitment is to do to make government work better for
the people. This is a restoration of common sense about
everything else. And I think the American people are going
to remain in favor of what's happening here.

Speaker 2 (40:12):
I like Mike Johnson fake name, Yeah, I mean, I
like that it's a restoration of common sense, which is
the thing that the Democrats are lacking tremendously is common sense,
especially when it comes to a lot of the stuff
going on out there. And I love what he says
here because the big thing is about Medicaid, medicare meta

(40:36):
THISI snap that this here, What about that though? Food kids?
What are we going to do? All of the And
as I said this over and over, I tried to
tell people, this is not even a bill that's finished.
It's not even out. It's got to go to committee.
It's even out of committee to get back to the Congress,

(40:56):
to get back out to where it needs to go
to the Senate. And even if all of these things happen,
and they you know, this group says that, and that
group says that the reality of so much of this
is we never know what it really looks like until
let's put into play. Oh yeah, because everybody, did you

(41:18):
guys realize that nobody knows what any of these things
look like until it's actually done and dusted and it's
put in to play. I was just finding somebody yesterday,
I said, think about this. Everybody's arguing about this there's
cuts here. Well there's not. First of all, no, But

(41:39):
secondly that's what you think. Do you know that for sure?

Speaker 1 (41:42):
No?

Speaker 2 (41:42):
But that's what I'm doing because you're there to scare everybody.
That's your Jim over here. They're screaming there's no cuts,
there's none of this stuff. And and you know, you
are saying that, But where do we really trust you? Nah,
it's government. It's hard to trust any of you. What's
it look like when it's actually put out there into
the ether? I don't know, And I said, it's like football, right,

(42:07):
So the NFL Monday morning quarterback. You get in there
by Tuesday Wednesday. You're going over tape and then you
start to put a game plan in and you're gonna
do this, and you can do that. You're running the moves,
and you're practicing the good on the chalkboard, and they
got it on the screen and they're going back and forth,
they're doing all that stuff. Then you think, this looks great.
Our game plan is solid. Then you play the other

(42:29):
team and what you thought they were going to do
they didn't do, and all of a sudden, your game
plan looks different because it has to be put into play.
Might continue.

Speaker 22 (42:43):
I challenge you, or anybody on your staff do a
word search for medicaid on the resolution that we passed
last night.

Speaker 1 (42:49):
You will not find it. That is not part of
this equation.

Speaker 22 (42:52):
Okay, we're talking about finding efficiencies in every program, but
not cutting benefits for people who rightly deserve that working requirements,
work requirements from medicaid. That is a something that is
public opinion polls almost ninety percent. You don't want able
bodied workers on a program that is intended, for example,
for single mothers with two small children who's just trying
to make it. That's what medicaid is for, not for

(43:14):
twenty nine year old males sitting on their couches playing
video games. We're going to find those guys and we're
going to send them back to work. That's what everybody supports.
That's what the Republicans are for. And by the way,
we find dignity in our work. That's going to be
good for everybody.

Speaker 2 (43:26):
Amn, sir, a man. This lady agrees, and she does
it in a much more entertaining way.

Speaker 23 (43:37):
I hear a lot of people out here talking about
old Trump finistop, fool stamps, and government assistance.

Speaker 1 (43:44):
What am I going to do? What the fuck you
think you need to do?

Speaker 23 (43:49):
Your ass need to get up and work and stop
being lazy, period, Because we don't want to hear the
pity party.

Speaker 2 (43:56):
You know what I'm saying, Absolutely, I understand complain. I
don't hear your pity party either. Get your ass out
there and work, and y'all have been getting over for years.

Speaker 23 (44:05):
To be honest and to keep it all the way
one hundred, A lot of y'all been living on fool
stemps for fifteen and twenty years, and that's just ridiculous.
Like what about the people like me that work hard
every day and gotta pay for groceries.

Speaker 1 (44:18):
I don't feel like that's fair.

Speaker 23 (44:20):
If anything, we should be the one eligible for fool stamps.

Speaker 1 (44:23):
I'm just keeping it real.

Speaker 2 (44:25):
Keep it real, sister, tell me more.

Speaker 23 (44:27):
A lot of y'all are lazy. Y'all don't want to
do shit, but yet y'all steady laying up having babies,
sitting around crying. And you know what I'm saying, don't
nobody want to hear that. Get y'all ass up and work, period, plain.

Speaker 2 (44:41):
And simple, ladies and gentlemen, we've got the winner of
the day. I appreciate your honesty, man, And you know what,
you're both right. You're twenty six, you're a dude living
at home. Get your ass off the couch, get yourself
a job and get out there and live it. Have

(45:05):
some dignity, have some respect. And on the other side
of it, what are you supposed to do if some
of your food stamps go away, figure out what you're
going to do to make that up by working. It's
not that simple, Chad, it is it is. You'll spend

(45:26):
more time trying to figure out how to fix the
system the way you want it, or to get around
the system to get what you need, then just going
out and going I gotta do what I gotta do
three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson shows your Twitter tweet at as
texted program. Meanwhile, egg flation, can we do anything to

(45:52):
stop it?

Speaker 24 (45:53):
According to the Secretary of Agriculture, the US will look
to import between seventy and one hundred million eggs. That
is still a relatively small number compared to the nearly
eight billion eggs the US produced in just the month
of January. The plans meant to address the impact of
the bird flu and it also calls for a five
hundred million dollar investment in biosecurity, four hundred million dollars

(46:15):
in financial relief for impacted farmers, and one hundred million
dollars in research and development of vaccines.

Speaker 2 (46:21):
Oh, that's good news. And you know Easter's coming up
and the body will be busy.

Speaker 24 (46:26):
One of the big questions is how do you deal
with the birds when the flu has been detected. The
US requires the calling of the entire flock to stop
the spread because the disease is so highly contagious, but
it can take nine months to repopulate. That means a
long time before you get that supply back. And according
to the Agriculture Secretary, prices are likely to go higher

(46:46):
into the spring and easter. That's high season generally for
egg prices. But they could ease with these measures this summer, hope.

Speaker 2 (46:54):
So we had that Farmer Center say Tex yesterday saying, look, look,
this is going to go on throughout the whole year
because anything born you know, March April isn't gonna start
producing eggs until next year. And I think a lot
of you who texted me and sent me, you know, messages,

(47:14):
said no way, they can't. Shouldn't it go faster? It doesn't.
I don't really know how long it takes, because, to
be honest with you, when I had baby chicks, and
I don't want to make you guys feel bad, they
were mostly for my reptiles to eat, so I never
got to see the full maturation of said animal. So
hearing it from the lady's mouth who handles the economy.

(47:40):
On top of that with farmers, I do believe we're
still going to have some egg inflation three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three atcha had Benson
shows your Twitter tweet at its text a program. Raycon
best earbuds around. Where are my Raycon's every single day?
But it's not just my earbuds. They have everything you

(48:02):
can think of at Raycon. So go to buy raycon
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amazing things they have right now, including yes, the everyday earbuds,
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wear mine every day, I don't think people realize I'm
on a microphone in front of a camera. I mean,

(48:26):
I'm doing stuff all the time, and I've always got
headphones on, especially when I'm editing and doing a bunch
of other things. They've got the everyday earbuds, they got
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(48:49):
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(49:12):
Raycon dot Com slash Chad and get a thirty day
happiness guarantee. Buy Raycon dot Com slash Chad at Chad
Benson Show. Is your Twitter? Tweet at us text the
program yesterday We didn't get to it because we were
doing so many other things. Did you guys know there
was a gold card? You didn't? Oh, you're gonna find

(49:35):
out about it straight ahead. Chad Benson Show, Chad Benson.
With all the chaos going on every day, we do
miss some stuff and the other day. I don't know

(49:55):
if you guys are aware of this. Some of you
might be gold card. What's a gold card?

Speaker 6 (50:03):
Trump?

Speaker 2 (50:03):
You're going to sell.

Speaker 8 (50:04):
What we're going to be selling a gold card.

Speaker 6 (50:09):
You have a green card, This is a gold card.

Speaker 8 (50:11):
We're going to be putting a price on that card
of about five million dollars, and that's going to give
you green card privileges.

Speaker 6 (50:17):
Plus it's going to be a roup to citizenship.

Speaker 2 (50:21):
A gold card. It's truly about the green but not
the green card. A gold card. By the way, a
video he didn't put together, but he did retruth it
chad Russian.

Speaker 6 (50:31):
Oligarch the eligible for the gold card. Yeah.

Speaker 25 (50:34):
Possibly, Hey, I know some Russian oligarch set of very
nice people.

Speaker 6 (50:38):
It's possible. They're not as wealthy as they used to be.
I think they can afford five million dollars.

Speaker 8 (50:44):
A lot of people are going to want to be
in this country, and they'll be able to work and
provide jobs and build companies and pay taxes, all of
those things.

Speaker 6 (50:54):
It's an incredible it's an incredible thing.

Speaker 2 (50:57):
It's an incredible thing.

Speaker 17 (50:58):
It is.

Speaker 2 (51:00):
Are you going to market this thing? Oh you are?
You've already got a commercial? Of course, I'd love to
hear it.

Speaker 7 (51:05):
Attention global elite, are you ready to make America your playground?
Introducing the Trump Gold Card your exclusive paths to live,
work and play in the USA. For just five million,
you can bypass the red tape and secure your spot
in the lend of opportunity. No need to worry about
job creation or economic contribution.

Speaker 2 (51:27):
Just flash your cash and you're in. Whether you're a
tech tycoon, a fashion mogul, or just have a hefty inheritance,
the Trump Gold Card welcomes you. But wait, there's more.
Act now, and you'll not only get a permanent residency,
but also a fast track to US citizenship. Don't miss

(51:48):
out on this golden opportunity to own your piece of
the American dream. The Trump Gold Card because of America
money talks. A drump call card is a satirical concept
and not an actual program. But you know they're working
on it, so stick around. I would assume they're gonna
work on it. Get ourselves out of debt. We'll just

(52:09):
start selling memberships to the greatest club of all time
MERCA three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to
twenty three at Chad Benson Show, to Twitter, your Instagram
and all of the other stuff. Love hearing from each
and every one of you right here on the Chad
Benson show we move from there to Texas, the measles

(52:34):
and Texas. Everything in Texas is bigger, including right now
the measles.

Speaker 18 (52:40):
More than one hundred and twenty people have been infected
with measles in West Texas, largely spreading among rural Mennonite communities.
Several measles cases have also been reported in New Mexico.
Offici will say there is no apparent link between the outbreaks,
but experts are warning cases will likely spread beyond unvaccinated
religious communities. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Junior in ciss
the outbreak is not unusual, despite turning deadly.

Speaker 2 (53:03):
Yeah, one person died a child. But and it's horrible.
And the way they make it sound is like, well,
the religious communities, here's the thing. The men in I community,
which is where it started, they're not anti vacs. They
just don't go to the doctor. That's not their thing.
But there's nothing in their religion. There's nothing in any
of the things they do that say they're anti vax,
anti anything. Remember, even the Amish are not anti vacs. Again,

(53:25):
they just don't go to the doctor.

Speaker 26 (53:28):
Luckily, the number of children that are not vaccinated here
in Texas is pretty low.

Speaker 7 (53:34):
We're lucky in that sense that close.

Speaker 27 (53:36):
It depends on what area, but we.

Speaker 26 (53:38):
Can get up to close to about ninety percent of
children that are vaccinated.

Speaker 2 (53:43):
Spreads fast and it can be deadly, as we know.
But they'll turn this into it's Robert Kennedy Junior's issue
because he's anti vax. I'm like, ah, God, here we go. Three, two, three, five, eight,
twenty four to twenty three. Act Chapmans, it shows your
Twitter versus a show guid the podcast. It is the
Jad Benson.

Speaker 17 (54:01):
Joe Chad Benson Joe.

Speaker 1 (54:40):
The Chad Benson Show. Socialism is bad.

Speaker 2 (54:45):
I think we know that, but a younger generation doesn't
understand it. They've never lived through it. Right. They see
China and think that socialism looks great. Everybody's got everything
they've ever dreamed of. They don't realize that's not really socialism.
That is control, only able to have that control because

(55:13):
capitalism props you up. They don't understand. They don't get it.
They think they do, but they don't. Reality is socialism
is evil and bad. And I'm not just talking a
smidge bad. I'm talking bad bad socialism.

Speaker 28 (55:36):
Socialism is the way forward.

Speaker 29 (55:38):
Socialism is popular. In recent years, well than a third
of American adults said they view socialism positively. Why maybe
because social media is filled with economically illiterate people saying
things like.

Speaker 12 (55:52):
Socialism is working better than capitalism ninety three percent of
the time.

Speaker 29 (55:56):
Ninety three percent of the time. Where does she get there, well,
I asked SOSCIL TV producer Christine Tokref to investigate.

Speaker 27 (56:05):
She got it from this study published in the Journal
of Health Services forty years ago, but its Marxist authors
conveniently exclude high income countries like the US, Japan, Canada,
in fact, all the biggest capitalist countries. They compare socialist
countries to allegedly capitalist countries like these, some of which
were at war. Based on that, she says.

Speaker 12 (56:27):
We have all the data showing that socialism does work.

Speaker 2 (56:31):
It doesn't work, it doesn't see. What the left loves
to talk about when it comes to socialism is, hey,
look how great it is in these countries Sweden, places
like that and which by the way, as you guys

(56:51):
all know that they're not socialists. They're not they're not socialist.
They are capitalistic with high taxes. They love to leave
out the inconvenient truth in all of these things. And

(57:13):
you can't do that, kids. I want the whole truth.
Socialism sucks, it doesn't work. It will not only destroy
your country, it kills.

Speaker 27 (57:24):
Madeline Pendleton is a TikTok star with more than a
million subscribers.

Speaker 6 (57:28):
What do you like about communism?

Speaker 27 (57:30):
She celebrates communism too, mostly.

Speaker 30 (57:32):
The increased life expectancy.

Speaker 27 (57:34):
But there's no increased life expectancy. People live longest in
capitalist places like Japan and South Korea, even in the
United States, where more people die young because we drive
more and so we have more car accidents, we eat
more and get fat.

Speaker 6 (57:51):
The macusis on your hamburger is macuzine.

Speaker 27 (57:56):
We shoot each other more often, and we take more
dangerous drugs. Yet we still live longer than people in China.
But socialism is also better, says Pendleton, because of.

Speaker 12 (58:06):
The ninety to one hundred percent homeownership rates.

Speaker 27 (58:10):
One hundred percent, that's just silly.

Speaker 2 (58:14):
It is silly. Who told you this? Well, the socialist
told me this, Okay, So that's what you believe, because
that's what it's all about. Comes from their perspective. And remember,
as they're talking about all of this, all these influencers
are doing it where on any anybody, on platforms designed
by capitalists, on phones or cameras designed by capitalists. That's

(58:40):
where they're doing it.

Speaker 27 (58:42):
China, if you believe their statistics, does have almost ninety
percent home ownership, but that only happened after China terminated
socialist housing. Under socialism, just twenty percent of people owned homes,
and socialists Venezuela homeowners don't even.

Speaker 1 (58:59):
Own their homes.

Speaker 18 (59:00):
Dozens of people squatting in this abandoned office tower in
central Caracas.

Speaker 12 (59:05):
Yet Pendleton claims the communes want to steal your house
from your landlord and give it straight to you.

Speaker 27 (59:11):
Pendleton has plenty of company praising socialism on social media.
This YouTuber with almost two million subscribers, tells people why
you should be a socialist.

Speaker 28 (59:20):
The guaranteed right to healthcare, food, and shelter.

Speaker 27 (59:23):
It's true socialism promises free healthcare, food and shelter, but
that doesn't mean what people get is any good.

Speaker 2 (59:30):
No, it's not freeze usually not good, right, It's not
when you're giving something to somebody for free. You're taking
something from somewhere else, and chances are you're not giving
the best thing around, and you have the greatest medicine,
who already talks about how great the everybody's literate where
you have to be. There's nothing else going on in Cuba,
and everybody's got all this great healthcare except for the

(59:53):
part where they have nothing else. And you know what
the socialists and commedists say, it's because so many embargoes
on them. They can't get anything. How many people are
breaking into these countries? How many look at Cuba?

Speaker 18 (01:00:09):
Lais laente morindos.

Speaker 27 (01:00:12):
And this socialist TikToker with Karl Marx like hair has
one hundred thousand subscribers.

Speaker 30 (01:00:19):
Capitalism is a political economy which prioritizes profits over people.
The antidote to that political economy would be socialism, a
political economy that prioritizes people over profits.

Speaker 27 (01:00:33):
Socialist theory does, but again and again what people get
is misery.

Speaker 28 (01:00:39):
You would be subjected to backbreaking labor, brutality, starvation.

Speaker 24 (01:00:43):
Countless millions of deaths, and the worst man made famine
in human history.

Speaker 27 (01:00:49):
Yet a man calling himself spooky scary socialist gets almost
two million views.

Speaker 2 (01:00:54):
Saying communism did work.

Speaker 14 (01:00:56):
It provided essential services like employment, rough incoming quality.

Speaker 2 (01:01:01):
Full employment. Here you do this, you're employed I don't
want to do it, you're going to do it or else,
and then when they're not looking, you don't do it
and they don't care. Wow, that sounds like fun.

Speaker 27 (01:01:12):
How can these people be so diluted. I'm eager to
hear what they'll say when John interviews them. They tell
millions of people the.

Speaker 28 (01:01:20):
Central idea that unites all socialists is maximizing freedom, a
more dignified life, and the democratization of power.

Speaker 27 (01:01:27):
Democratization like in China. Here there's just one party and
its leader made himself president for life. Every socialist economy
has failed. Venezuela was once the richest country in South America.

(01:01:51):
Now there are food shortages.

Speaker 14 (01:01:53):
More and more.

Speaker 2 (01:01:54):
People reduce tweeting from the rubbish think about that, the
rubbish think about that. You go look at all these
countries that have tried communism, communism straightforward communism, and socialism

(01:02:15):
collectivism where everything is owned by the government, and they're
the ones who trickle it down to you and tell
me where that's been a boom and a success. You can't.

Speaker 27 (01:02:27):
Socialism just doesn't work.

Speaker 2 (01:02:29):
It seems to work in Vietnam really great.

Speaker 27 (01:02:31):
Actually, so says this TikTok socialist But what finally worked
in Vietnam was free markets. Before Vietnam embraced capitalism, people
went hungry. The country depended on handouts. Then Vietnam legalized
capitalism and freed the private sector. The TikTokers make the

(01:02:51):
same mistake about China. Socialism worked in.

Speaker 12 (01:02:55):
China eradicated extreme poverty.

Speaker 27 (01:02:57):
Wrong again. When China banned capitalism, millions died.

Speaker 10 (01:03:02):
Those who didn't get on with the leader of the
production team or those who dissipate his orders with staffed
to death.

Speaker 2 (01:03:07):
It was only after campaigns like the Great Leap Forward
and the Cultural Revolution had killed tens of millions of people.

Speaker 27 (01:03:14):
The China's leaders reversed course.

Speaker 2 (01:03:16):
Embracing capitalism and encouraging private business.

Speaker 27 (01:03:19):
Only then did average incomes in China rise.

Speaker 2 (01:03:23):
Only then China survives today because of capitalism. Without capitalism,
they'd be done without capitalism, They'd have nothing without capitalism,
they would have zilch zero, they'd have a starving society

(01:03:44):
without capitalism. They needed it because they looked over and
they saw everywhere else that had gone hardcore communists through
the decades collapse, and they said, we better change our ways,
or else we better figure this out out or else.

Speaker 27 (01:04:01):
But socialism's promoters still say you don't need capitalism or profit.

Speaker 28 (01:04:06):
Innovation can flourish even when people are not motivated by profit.
The USSR gave the world the anthrax vaccine, artificial satellites,
and one of the earliest mobile phones.

Speaker 27 (01:04:16):
That's true, but do any of you have a socialist
made phone today? The West has just created.

Speaker 1 (01:04:23):
So much more.

Speaker 27 (01:04:24):
The socialists say ownership should be collective, but every attempt
anywhere at collective ownership has failed. In America, people tried
that two hundred years ago.

Speaker 2 (01:04:37):
Yeah, I've tried it on several occasions. And remember the
reason these things fail. Like, it all sounds great, right,
We're all going to live in this utopia. We're all
doing our thing, and we're all working for the betterment
of man, and everybody's equal, and we're all doing these things,
and then you realize that will never work because we're humans.

(01:04:59):
If you want perfection, you got to get rid of
the humans. Because when it comes to output, when it
comes to smarts, when it comes to motivation, we're not
all equal. So making everything equal at the tip of

(01:05:23):
a spear is not a good thing and does not
promote excitement and enthusiasm to move forward, to create, to
become an amazing society. It creates mush, starvation, sadness. Yeah,

(01:05:47):
that's what it. So if you want that full collectivism,
knock yourself out. Show me where it's working. I'd like
to see it where you've got no capitalism and we're
all doing the same thing and we're not motivating by
anything outside of just doing the best thing for our neighbor.

Speaker 27 (01:06:04):
In you harmony Indiana, private property was abolished. The result,
as with similar attempts, was famine. No matter how many
views these propagandists get, the fact is socialism fails.

Speaker 29 (01:06:17):
So what do these popular socialists say in response to
these inconvenient facts? Sadly, I can't show you we invited
them to come here make their points to you.

Speaker 2 (01:06:29):
Not one would.

Speaker 1 (01:06:30):
Socialism stays winning.

Speaker 29 (01:06:32):
The bottom line is that incentives matter. Nobody washes a
rental car because most people don't care a lot about
what belongs to everyone just human nature. Capitalism isn't perfect,
but if we really want a better future and freedom, capitalism,
not socialism, is the way to get those things.

Speaker 2 (01:06:53):
The inconvenient truth when you hear these people talk about
how wonderful everything is in other places. Guess what, You're
always free to go to those places if they want you.
You'd be surprised, though, how much they don't want you.
And for all the freedoms you have to espouse your socialism.
If you got over to some of these countries and

(01:07:14):
didn't like it, and you wanted to espouse maybe the
great things about the West, I bet you that wouldn't
go the way you think. Three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Menson shows your
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Use code Chatroughgreens dot com use code Chat. It is
the Chad Benson Show, Deep States.

Speaker 1 (01:08:50):
No Deep doo doo eeah, The Chat Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:08:55):
Hey Alexa, spy on me more and maybe make a
mistake here there and potentially ruin someone's life.

Speaker 18 (01:09:03):
What.

Speaker 14 (01:09:03):
At an event in New York City, Amazon pulled the
wraps off Alexa plus, a new version of the company's
voice assistant that incorporates generative AI and gadgets. To Vindra
Hardawar says, it's designed to make the system easier to
talk to.

Speaker 15 (01:09:17):
You'll be able to like just talk to Alexa, say hey,
what's look at pizza near me and have it delivered
to you through delivery services like grub Hub.

Speaker 14 (01:09:24):
But AI like this can produce false or erroneous information.

Speaker 2 (01:09:28):
If that information is incorrect, that hurts your life. Oh man,
it's your own personal assistant. It's totally cool. And I
knew it was coming for years. You want to know
how I knew? So when this is a great, bizarre
but yet fun story. When we moved to our first
house when I was a kid, I was like fifteen,

(01:09:50):
to Cyprus, California. It's just for my dad died. Uh.
It was my mom, my aunt, my grandma, myself and
my little sister. We rented a house from this guy
and he was really interesting. He was an inventor. He
was all kinds of like it's one of those things
where we're like, man, this guy is all kinds of things.

(01:10:13):
And they were moving to a bigger place. They were,
you know, in their thirties. It was him and his wife.
She was pregnant. He had created this thing. So I'm
thinking this is like nineteen eighty five, eighty six. He
had created this thing that they were using on the
Space Shuttle that was essentially Alexa, and he created it

(01:10:37):
for the Space Shuttle for a certain thing, and then
he had recreated it for his wife who was pregnant,
but she was had a high risk pregnancy, so she
could move around a lot, so she could talk to
this thing, and it was doing certain things in the
house for it. It was the craziest thing in the world.
And I was shocked, you know, I'm like fifteen sixteen.

(01:11:01):
It was just it was it was crazy.

Speaker 5 (01:11:03):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:11:03):
I didn't realize the repercussions because I was more excited
with the fact that his dog was whipped in jaws. Uh,
that's the one that gets eaten. I was more you know,
I was pretty pretty excited about that. But it was
just fascinating And now looking out you're like, wow, this
is incredible. The difference is there wasn't the fear of

(01:11:25):
all your stuff being stolen or Alexa putting something out
there on the internet that maybe you didn't want to see.
But it was crazy cool because he had left the
stuff in the house. Now it wasn't hooked up anymore
because he had all the like he had this It
was back when computers like took up a whole room,
but the all the stuff was on the wall where

(01:11:45):
you could communicate. It was crazy how advanced he was,
and also how cool this dog was. His dog was
also a frisbee world champion. Just the whole thing was
a trip. Looking back on it, I was like, whoa
three two, three, five, three eight, twenty five, twenty three
at Chadbenson Show. Is your Twitter tweet at a text
to program. Go to check out chadbensonshow dot com, got

(01:12:07):
a new website up, got merch and everything else, as
well as go and like and subscribe on our YouTube,
Chad Benson Show TV. Thanks so much. Right here from
the Chad Benson Show. Coming up our three. Still a
ton of stuff to get to that I haven't gotten to.
We're going to talk more about Jake Tapper in this
new amazing book called I Lied to Everybody, But now

(01:12:30):
I'm gonna pretend like I didn't. Wow, what do you
think of me? I don't think that's the name. That's
a long name, by the way, probably not a solid
name at all. We're also going to talk a bit
about new study out about liberals liberal women, Are they
the most unhappy? And also a great article out about

(01:12:52):
men and democrats and religion. Man, you start putting it
all together, it makes sense. We'll talk about that bunch
about the Stufans, the show, grab the podcast, Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:13:04):
This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:13:33):
All right, gentlemen, he's got one barrel left.

Speaker 16 (01:13:39):
When he fires that, take out your pistols and shoot
him down like a mangie scoundrel.

Speaker 2 (01:13:43):
He is. Oh, I love that that right there. Gene
Hackman passed away today, ninety five. His wife also was
pronounced dead at the scene, as was the dog. We'll
talk about this a little bit more feeling. It was
probably carbon monoxide poisoning. But man, two time Oscar winner,

(01:14:08):
one of those guys that you're thinking, is he the
greatest American actor of all time? He's in the conversation,
there's no doubt about that. Absolutely in the conversation and
the range of people. He played, some comedic, absolutely drama,
knocked it out, to pack, Westerns, mobsters, cops, you name it,

(01:14:32):
he did it all. Gene Hackman was ninety five years old.
I think most people sign up for that life. His
name in Latin means hypocrisy. Oh it doesn't, Jake Tapper

(01:14:52):
doesn't mean him. What does it mean? Oh, it just
means Jake Tapper. I had no idea. What are you
talking about, Jedda. He's not very very cool. Jake Tappers
got a new book out. We'll get to that. In
a second. Last couple years of Joe Biden's presidency, there

(01:15:12):
had been rumors that maybe he was not cognitively all there.
I know, it's a shocker. The media went out of
their way to press the issue, to hunt down every lead,

(01:15:35):
to scour every single thing they could do, uncover anything
they could. They looked in every single place, They flipped
over rocks, they used sort they did none of those things. Instead,
they told everybody in America, there's nothing going on here,

(01:15:56):
and if you dare question it, well that's bad.

Speaker 4 (01:16:00):
Is very clearly a cognitive decline.

Speaker 1 (01:16:03):
That's what I'm referring to. It makes me uncomfortable, you are.

Speaker 3 (01:16:07):
I think it was so amazing. It's so amazing to me.

Speaker 21 (01:16:10):
That trying figure out an answer cognitive decline.

Speaker 4 (01:16:13):
You can tell me that what I was suggesting was
I think.

Speaker 3 (01:16:16):
That you were mocking his stutter. Yeah, I think you
were mocking his stutter. And I think you have absolutely
no standing to diagnose somebody's cognitive decline. I would think
that somebody in the Trump family would be more sensitive
to people who do do not have medical licenses diagnosing
politicians from Afar. Plenty of people have diagnosed your father

(01:16:37):
from Afar, and I'm sure it offends you.

Speaker 2 (01:16:40):
That's Laura Trump. He meant father in law, which would
be Donald Trump. So you heard that right. It's his stutter,
that's it. Hey, Why can't Joe remember he's president? Why
can't Joe remember anything he's talking about any names? Why
does Joe need to have, I don't know, an ear piece?

(01:17:08):
Why does he need teleprompters when he's in a room
full of two people, including one being himself. That's a
little ridiculous. Jed, it's because of his stutter. He said that,
then he has the nerve to release a freaking book

(01:17:29):
as if he's the hero of the story.

Speaker 3 (01:17:33):
Alex Thompson of Axios and I have spent the last
several months talking to more than two hundred insiders and
officials and donors and activists more willing to talk post election,
of course, to explain the last couple of years in
politics and how we as a nation got here with
never before heard stories from behind the scenes. You will

(01:17:55):
not believe what was really going on. You can pre
order the book at original sinbook dot com, Original sin
book dot com.

Speaker 2 (01:18:06):
We know what was going on, we saw with our
own GDIs The book should be called Sorry I Lied
to you America. I hate Donald Trump. That's what it
should be called. Do you know the kind of Cojon's
you have to have to look at America and to go,

(01:18:33):
I'm going to write a book about the cover up.
That's not your job. Your job was to crack the
cover up. Your job as a journalist was to uncover
what was going on. That was your job. But instead

(01:18:57):
you ran interference. Instead, you push back on anybody who
brought anything up, including other Democrats and a few other
reporters as oh, well, you know, it's the Wall Street Journal,
it's Murdock, it's whatever. You pushed back. Nobody out there

(01:19:23):
had the balls enough to go. You know what, I'm
gonna make a name for myself. I may not like Trump,
but I'm gonna make a name for myself because this
is the right thing, this is the thing that needs
to be done. There is obviously a cover up going
on here, arguably the biggest cover up we have seen

(01:19:46):
in forever, and it wasn't even a cover up in
a way where we don't really know for sure. We
don't have access to files, we weren't really sure what
was happening. We sow it on the screen, and now
you're gonna rush in and go. I've written a book.

(01:20:09):
It's gonna be amazing. We've talked to people for several months.
Trump has been president for just over a month, and
if we're gonna go back several months, I don't know
if you're aware of this. The election hadn't even happened

(01:20:31):
by then. You are the ass hat that wants to
be the hero of the story. So you say, I'm
gonna save this girl, but I'm gonna be I'm gonna
light the house on fire Russian and save her and
the dog, And instead what happens You burn up and
nobody survives. You. Guys still mad at me for that? Yeah,

(01:20:56):
we're still mad at you for that. Again. Congratulations, get
a wheelbarrow, and let's see if you can convince America
the hero that you are. Ladies and gentlemen, Elon Musk, thank.

Speaker 11 (01:21:12):
You, mister president. The overall goal here with the Dose
team is to help address the almost episode. We simply
cannot sustain the country two trillion dollar deficite the interest
rates of just the interest on the national debt. Now
it seeds for the best apartment spending.

Speaker 2 (01:21:29):
We spend a lot on the Nefest department.

Speaker 11 (01:21:32):
If we're spending like an over trillion dollars on interest.
If this continues, the country will go become detacto macroft.
It's not an optional thing. It is a central thing.
That's the reason I'm here.

Speaker 2 (01:21:46):
That's the reason he's there. No, it's not. It's to
enrich yourself. That's the only reason you're there. You're not
there for anything else. You've got to enrich yourself. You're
making gazillions. I read last night. I think he's lost
thirty two or fifty two billion dollars since he started
working on the doge and.

Speaker 11 (01:22:05):
Taking a lot of plaque and getting a lot of difference.
I'd like to speck them up. But if we don't
do this, America will go bankrupt. That's why it has
to be done.

Speaker 10 (01:22:17):
I'm confident at this point I'll cot would you know,
blocking my head, wouldn't head. It's got a lot of
would have there that we can actually find controllion dollars in.

Speaker 2 (01:22:30):
Savings a trillion. I thought it was two trillion. Yeah,
he's not cutting two trilli. They've already moved that goalpost
because they recognize that was never going to happen. Hell,
they can't get people to email them back. Well, how
can they, Chad? Why would they? It's like North Korea.

Speaker 31 (01:22:46):
And again, like it's just a flex it's just you.
You need to know who's in charge, and this is
one of the ways we're making you aware. And the
feeling that I felt responding to that email was such
a glimpse into a possible future here, probable future here
if we don't have to something about it. It felt
so scary and so heartbreaking. It felt much like I
would imagine living in a place like what I always

(01:23:07):
imagine North Korea to be like, would be like where
the energy is Yes, Master, your wish is my command?

Speaker 2 (01:23:13):
Are you? Yeah? I'm being serious?

Speaker 6 (01:23:15):
Are you?

Speaker 2 (01:23:17):
I'm just curious because you're being serious. First of all,
I don't think they use the word what's the energy
today in North Korea. These people are so hilarious. You know,
you're not well right. You know, if that's your thought
process and you're a liberal woman, I could already tell
we're going to get to you in the little bit.

(01:23:38):
That's the most absurd thing ever. When you hear the
word dictator, when you hear the word fascist, nazi, now
we've thrown them in with North Korea. When you hear
all of that stuff, you've lost your blanking mind. I mean,
it's gone gone. Speaking of North Korea, do you see

(01:23:59):
that they pull off the biggest heist in history. They
think they're still one point six billion dollars worth of bitcoin?
Do you really say one point six billion dollars worth?
Because this isn't bitcoin its own, So would you say
one point six billion bitcoins? But you wouldn't because one

(01:24:23):
point six billion bitcoins is anyway. They did it. Their
energy though that day was through the roof three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four twenty three at Chad Benson shoo.
And is your Twitter, your Instagram and all of the
other things Bullwork Capital. Speaking of energy, they've got plenty

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for you. Why is that, you say, Because my man
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(01:25:52):
past performance and not guarantee future results Track two, five, one, three,
seven At Chadminton show, your Twitter, your Instagram, all of
the other things. We've got a video up and YouTube.
Go to YouTube dot com and then put in Chad
Benson Show TV Like and subscribe. Check out the video
about Jake Tapper and it's just spectacular. If you have

(01:26:13):
a chance to go, check that out famous any show,
the podcast What's Trending? Straight Ahead, Chad Benson Show, Chad Benson.
Now it's time to find out what's trending. What's trending?

Speaker 32 (01:26:36):
James Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Sera, what trupping?

Speaker 2 (01:27:01):
Let's find out what was trending on this Thursday. Gene
Hackman and Michelle Treckenberg both number one trending things on Google.
Schell died yesterday thirty nine, mother Founder, unresponsive at her home,
Gossip Girl, Buffy the Vampire Slayer. She was only thirty nine.

(01:27:25):
She had had a liver transplant and there's no foul
play suspected there. Same thing with Gene Hackman. A welfare
check took place and he and his wife and dog
were found dead or partner. I don't even know if
they're married measles trending on Google. They don't even know

(01:27:50):
they're trending. That's the funny thing, Epstein. When are we
gonna get all the list? What's the list? We're waiting
for the list. Trump's guys a video still causing a stir.
Keep doing what you're doing, guys, You're going to keep
overreacting and then he's going to keep doing it. Head

(01:28:12):
over to Yahoo, Gene Hackman, Michelle Trachenberg, Donald Trump's AI video,
Kate Middleton and Prince William shack commuter says they take
the train to Wales for a royal outing the Doge,
and finally over to Yeahoo Gene Hackman. Number one trending thing,

(01:28:35):
Epstein and his island and his list. It's the list,
Medicaid Michelle Trachenberg, Jake Tapper hilarious and talking about that
today three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four twenty
three at Chad Benson's show, It's your Twitter, your Instagram,

(01:28:58):
check out the YouTube as well. Love it when you
do Chat Benson Show TV, Like and subscribe right here
on the Chat Benson Show. Jill Biden Wappo Cabinet Enemy
of the State, Trump, Gaza video, all things trending in

(01:29:21):
the magical world of Twitter. Now, you guys know all
the things that are trending everywhere. Yeah, Gena Ackman was
ninety five. He hadn't been seen a lot. Last movie
was two thousand and four. And I mean it's I mean,
he's ninety five. Les, Let's let's just be honest about

(01:29:43):
you know, he's ninety five years old. He wasn't forty seven.
He wasn't forty five, he wasn't fifty five. But this sounds,
you know, Anthony I were talking about it sounds like,
you know, it was carbon monoxide poisoning. Probably because the
dog's dead too. His wife or girlfriend, she was only
sixty five. So it, you know, looks like it was

(01:30:06):
more of an accident than anything else, because you think
to yourself, you know, especially couples get older. You know
a lot of times, especially if couples are together for
a very very long time, you'll see one die right
after another. In this situation, I think it was more
than that because the dog died three two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three. At Chad Benson's show, It's
Your Twitter, you can tweet at us and text the

(01:30:27):
program got some of your texts coming out, a lot
of other stuff to get to still today on this
beautiful Thursday. If you're listening to the show, we always say,
shame on you grab the podcast because that really helps
us out. And check out Chad Benson Show TV. It
really does help us. It's on YouTube. Like and subscribe,
and check out the new website, chadbentsonshow dot Com. All

(01:30:47):
kinds of stuff on there, some merch we're just getting
it up and running. So if you have a chance
to go check that out as well, Thanks so much.
We appreciate that.

Speaker 17 (01:30:55):
It's a Chad Benson show, Chad Benson, Joe.

Speaker 2 (01:31:21):
The Chad Benson Show. Are liberals more miserable than conservatives? Well,
the answer to that is yes, and scientifically yes, at
least according to the polls, especially women, because women are
the most progressive. Women are the most emotionally driven when

(01:31:41):
it comes to activism and things of that nature. You're
saying emotion because it's a woman. Yes, I am, it's exactly.
There's no way check the kid. Why are you being serious?
I am being one hundred percent serious. Democrats, you or
a giant fing mess that's we understand. And if you

(01:32:05):
don't believe me, there is polls out to prove it.
Oh indeed.

Speaker 33 (01:32:11):
Okay, So we have a new poll out that shows
liberal women are the most unhappy lonely, and conservative women
ages eighteen to forty are married at rates that are
twenty percent percentage points higher than liberal women in the
same age group.

Speaker 26 (01:32:27):
Look at these numbers, you guys. So liberals are married
at thirty one percent, moderates at thirty seven percent, conservatives
fifty one percent of them are married.

Speaker 2 (01:32:38):
Fifty one percent. Well, why does it matter. I don't
need a man to make me happy. Okay. You know
what liberal women report being lonely? Well why is that? Well,
because men tend to be more conservative. Single men, especially

(01:32:58):
younger single men, tend to be more conservative. Oh oh,
I didn't know that. And liberal women tend to be
uber progressive, especially young single and you know what they
don't want. They don't want conservative men, so continue to

(01:33:20):
be miserable.

Speaker 26 (01:33:21):
So some people saying with this study that that might
be an indication of why their happiness is So this
study has been done for twenty years, it used to
be or more than that. You think it's some more
like thirty years. It used to be that liberal men
were the most unhappy, and now things have switched and
liberal women are now the most unhappy.

Speaker 2 (01:33:43):
And it's like, this is a big study, This wasn't
like five people and one of the interesting things. So
they go and they talk to several people, including Brad Wilcox,
sociology professor at the University of Virginia, and he said,
there are a few things that really drive in particular

(01:34:10):
conservative women and make them happier compared to liberal women,
which is what they're missing out on. One is conservative
women tend to be more likely to embrace a sense
of agency. They have a sense that they are not
in any way the victim of society and all of

(01:34:34):
the stuff. They're also less likely. Here comes the emotional
part kids to catastrophy things, especially public events, doom scrolling. Essentially,
they also spend less time online doom scrolling. Oh oh,

(01:34:56):
and they also feel like it's a partnership and they're
going in the same direction and they've got people that
can count on. The professor his name was Wilcox. It's
told Fox News Digital that marriage and family are enormous
source of meaning and purpose for most people. When we

(01:35:20):
talked about all of the stuff, they broke down before
the election. Young men are abandoned by the Democratic Party.
They're told that the word masculine itself is toxic, and
so they've moved on and the Democrats are fine with that.
We're going to get deeper into all of this stuff tomorrow.

(01:35:44):
The other thing is women feel like, oh, it's my world,
it's my time, and so we're going to go do
all of these things, and my life will give me purpose.
And you find out, you know what, No, that's not
really what it's all about. I'm fifty four years old
or forty eight, depending on who I'm talking to. I

(01:36:05):
will tell you my life. I love it. I'm stoked,
the best wife of awesome kids, so blessed. I got
home yesterday from being up for quite a long time.

(01:36:26):
Walk in the house. There's a little Charlie. She got
her boots on shorts. It's beautiful out here. She wants
to go scootering. It was great, It's amazing, it was
absolutely amazing. That's purpose. My stepdaughter and my wife, they

(01:36:53):
go out last night. They go to Sephora and get
a bunch of makeup and have dinner out and have
a good time. Came home with a smile on her face.
That's purpose sitting around scrolling thinking about how Trump's going
to take away everything in the world and blah blah
blah blah blah. One of the other things he said
and maybe one of the bigger things. And this is crazy,

(01:37:14):
I know, because we don't talk about gender, because gender
is a construct. Conservative women are more likely, not more,
They are one hundred percent likely to embrace gender differences
between men and women and prioritize family and attending religious services,
which is another huge thing they talk about religion. Conservative
women go to church more often and have that sense

(01:37:41):
of community compared to liberal women. So there's another sense
of belonging to something. That is what we are. We're
a creature that needs and wants and craves companionship. And

(01:38:06):
it is amazing that. You know, again, they all wonder
why nobody wants to date them. Well, the reality is
is these uber progressive women are miserable, emotionally over the top.
In so many cases. You go out and look at
all of these protests, seven or eight out of ten

(01:38:30):
in the group are women, And you go look at
all of these protests as well. The men kind of beta,
not a lot of alphas there. Low t is what
I'm saying. It is a sad situation. On top of that,

(01:38:50):
more and more men are foregoing college, and what do
women look at if you don't have that degree. They
don't want to marry down, so they'd rather be single
and miserable. They won't date somebody with differing opinions about
a lot of things, especially in politics where men just
don't care. There are so many things that are driving

(01:39:16):
these women crazy. And it's not hard to see go
to colleges. For God's sakes, we've set this world up
now for girls and women in particular in education. We've
demonized the boys, put them on drugs, set it up

(01:39:38):
to be a girls world college. The women are passing
men like you couldn't believe. Yet they're miserable. Those are
the numbers. And some of you listening are like, yeah,
I will tell you this. My sister's twenty six, getting
married next week. Happiest can be got two kids. Some

(01:40:03):
of her friends married with kids, shock at this age
having kids. Some of the kids, some of the girls
that she went to school with, they've gone off to college,
they're not married, they're home, they're miserable, and they think
the world's coming to an end all the time. Three two, three, five,

(01:40:23):
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show. Sure, Twitter,
your Instagram, all of the other things right here on
the Chad Benson Show. Speaking of crazy women, remember that
Luigi character. Here's a perfect example of insanity. What made
you want to organize this protest? Yeah?

Speaker 5 (01:40:41):
Well, I spent twenty six months in prison for dui
negligent homicide and that.

Speaker 2 (01:40:47):
Was ash right, bis.

Speaker 5 (01:40:48):
Man appreciate it. Yeah, that was after I was the
victim of domestic violence, and so the experience really taught
me that whoever goes to prison is a victim first.
So when I saw Luigi and I heard what was
going on, I wanted.

Speaker 2 (01:41:02):
To you was getting abused, and you was having a
couple of drinks to deal with your pain, and then
you was driving and then someone happened to be in
the way.

Speaker 5 (01:41:10):
Actually, I hit a shopping cart at three miles an
hour in a parking lot. On the shopping cart, knocked
someone over and he died about a week later.

Speaker 2 (01:41:18):
Man, So it was really this shopping cart that should
have been in prison realistically.

Speaker 5 (01:41:22):
Fair to say, or the alcohol one of the two.

Speaker 2 (01:41:25):
Oh, I see, she's a victim. She killed somebody because
people were apparently she was getting beaten. Not quite sure.
She got drunk. No responsibility. And by the way, the
guy that's interviewer, he's hilarious. I thought at first it
was somebody real that I found out. No, this is
what he does. He goes to all these things and
he messes with people. He's like, yeah, I respect you know,

(01:41:47):
she has no idea. He's taking the piss. Oh is
there more? Of course there is a bunch of dudes.
No more women have like Luigi fever though, Yeah, that
Bluigi Fever. Yet this is what he did. Good, it's great.

Speaker 14 (01:42:03):
Actually, I believe we should do more.

Speaker 2 (01:42:05):
Did Luigi do the right thing?

Speaker 1 (01:42:07):
I think he did what needed to be done.

Speaker 2 (01:42:08):
Should every healthcare CEO be unlived, all of the corrupt ones?

Speaker 25 (01:42:12):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (01:42:13):
Is Elon Musk next?

Speaker 14 (01:42:15):
Oh?

Speaker 6 (01:42:15):
I hope, so, I hope his Luigi's out there somewhere.

Speaker 2 (01:42:19):
Why did Luigi compare to say Nelson Mandela?

Speaker 1 (01:42:22):
Oh, he's up there with Nelson Mandela.

Speaker 2 (01:42:24):
All right, who's hotter Luigi or George Floyd Lucia, George Floyd. Yeah,
Luigi be ready to fight. Fight the war Man. Is
Luigi the new Martin Luther King?

Speaker 16 (01:42:36):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:42:37):
Prisoners should be supported. You people are insane. You're absolutely insane. Again,
I bet you they're all educated, and I bet you
they're all single. I'm just throwing it out there three two, three, five, three,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show, to Twitter,
your Instagram, all of the other things. Wrap it up

(01:42:57):
straight ahead, But first prize pick maybe prize picks? Are
you ready to win? Go now, download the app now. Okay,
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(01:43:21):
the minute you play that lineup right into your account.
It's that simple. So you're saying to yourself self, what
is prize picks? Don't think of it. You're not doing
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at lines. It's over under take. For instance, tonight Lakers
are playing Okay, do you think Luca or Lebron. Pick

(01:43:46):
one of the two. We'll score over twenty three and
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let's say you go over and you're like, okay, Golden
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are tons of promos and again, download the app, use
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(01:44:29):
up Straightad Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 24 (01:44:41):
Hashtag 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 15 (01:44:52):
Gene Hackman's road to acting started in the nineteen fifties
the California is Pasadena Playhouse, where he was voted least likely.

Speaker 2 (01:44:59):
To succeed What's My Name?

Speaker 15 (01:45:01):
Coyle what, But he went out to win the Oscar
for Best Actor in nineteen seventy one's The French Connection.

Speaker 2 (01:45:06):
I want to hear it?

Speaker 3 (01:45:06):
Come, yes?

Speaker 2 (01:45:08):
Have you betten that right?

Speaker 1 (01:45:09):
Yeah?

Speaker 15 (01:45:09):
An incredible variety of roles followed the Poseidon Adventure, OOS Yours, Unforgiven,
and of course the Superman film.

Speaker 1 (01:45:16):
Says Alex Luthor, I don't as kryptonize Superman.

Speaker 6 (01:45:21):
Little souvenir for the old hometown. I've spent no expreense.

Speaker 1 (01:45:24):
To make you feel right at home.

Speaker 15 (01:45:25):
Ackman retired from acting after two thousand and four. Is
Welcome to Mooseport. Was also a successful novelist.

Speaker 2 (01:45:31):
Yeap died ninety five. His wife died as well, sixty
five in Their Dog So we'll find out more in
the coming days. Great actor. Nominated for the Academy Awards
five times, two wins The French Connection and Unforgiven. He
was nominated for Bonnie and Clyde. I never sang from

(01:45:51):
my father Mississippi Burning. Those are the three he didn't win.
He got two Baptists, three Golden Globes, and one sag Award,
and he also got the Cecil b De Mill Award
as well. He will be missed, no doubt about that.
And he hasn't acted in quite a long time, but man,
he was just otherworldly. Have you heard of a green card?

(01:46:14):
You have? I didn't have a chance to get to
this yesterday, but if you heard of the gold card.

Speaker 8 (01:46:20):
We're going to be selling a gold card.

Speaker 6 (01:46:24):
You have a green card. This is a gold card.

Speaker 8 (01:46:26):
We're going to be putting a price on that card
of about five million dollars and that's going to give
you green card privileges.

Speaker 6 (01:46:32):
Plus it's going to be a route.

Speaker 8 (01:46:34):
To citizenship, and wealthy people will be coming into our
country by buying this card. They'll be wealthy and they'll
be successful, and they'll be spending a lot of money
and paying a lot of taxes and employing a lot
of people. And we think it's going to be extremely successful.

Speaker 2 (01:46:49):
Wealthy successful. Sell seven million of those, we get ourselves
out of a little bit of debt. Tell me more, sir, Russian.

Speaker 25 (01:46:57):
Oligar the eligible forty Yeah, possibly, Hey, I know some
Russian oligarc center very nice people.

Speaker 6 (01:47:05):
It's possible, and not as wealthy as they used to be.
I think they can afford five million dollars.

Speaker 8 (01:47:10):
A lot of people are going to want to be
in this country, and they'll be able to work and
provide jobs, and build companies and pay taxes, all of
those things.

Speaker 6 (01:47:19):
It's an incredible it's an incredible thing.

Speaker 2 (01:47:23):
It is. And you know what, if you're going to
do that, you better figure out how you're going to
advertise for it. Oh, they've already done that.

Speaker 7 (01:47:29):
Attention, global elite, are you ready to make America your playground?
Introducing the Trump Gold Card your exclusive past to live,
work and play in the USA. For just five million,
you can bypass the red tape and secure your spot
in the lend of opportunity. No need to worry about
job creation or economic contribution.

Speaker 2 (01:47:51):
Just flash your cash and you're in. Whether you're a
tech tycoon, a fashion mogul, or just have a hefty inheritance,
the Trump Gold Card welcomes you. But wait, there's more.
Act now, and you'll not only get a permanent residency,
but also a fast track to US citizenship. Don't miss

(01:48:11):
out on this golden opportunity to own your piece of
the American dream, the Trump Gold Card. Because of America
money talks. The Trump Gold Card is a satirical concept
and not an actual program. But you know they're working
on it, so stick around. Yeah, they probably are working
on it. I'm not gonna lie to you on that.

(01:48:32):
Three two three, five, three eight twenty four twenty three.
That is your text line. We'd love it when you
get your text and I try to answer back as
many as possible. You can reach out to us at
the Twitter at Chad Benson Show, as well as Facebook
and Instagram, and of course go to YouTube and like
and subscribe to the Chad Benson Show TV. We appreciate

(01:48:55):
it when you do that right here on the Chad
Benson Show. Great show today. As always loved talking to
all of you. Man, I tell you what think about
all the great actors out there, but also some of
the ones that are on borrow time. I mean, you
know reality of Clint Eastwood, how old he is still

(01:49:17):
going though, and the likes of you know, even to
Niro and Bachino and them who are acting and still going.
I mean you think about that. It's a father time man.
He don't mess around, he don't lose, that is for
damn sure. You guys have an absolutely phenomenal rest of
your day and we'll do a hold on a second.

(01:49:39):
I'd see you Friday. Yeah, we'll do it again tomorrow night,
night Jack.

Speaker 1 (01:49:43):
This is the Chad Benson Show.
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