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August 23, 2024 • 109 mins
Kamala Harris accepts the party nomination as the DNC wraps up. What factors lead to longevity? The takeaways from the DNC. The Harris "vibes" election. Next steps for the GOP. Jim Kennedy, Kennedy Institute for Public Policy Research, breaks down the DNC.
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:10):
Independent thoughts, independent life. This is Chad Benson, It's behind us.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
Bye bye, DNC Chicago, Thank you so much.

Speaker 3 (00:23):
We have to leave now.

Speaker 2 (00:24):
Now the real work begins. How do we take vibes
and turn it into a win. Last night, kamal Aris did.

Speaker 3 (00:32):
Everything she had to do.

Speaker 2 (00:34):
Don't flub your lines, go out, do exactly when you've practiced.
Don't do any more than that. The old adage kiss,
keep it simple, stupid, that's simple, easy.

Speaker 4 (00:52):
She did it.

Speaker 3 (00:54):
She came out, she delivered her lines.

Speaker 2 (00:57):
Wasn't an overly long god speech in a time of TikTok.
Out of all the speeches I've seen over the last
few days, Tim Wall's speech was the best because it
was like fifteen minutes. People have a very short attention span.
Go out, deliver the speech in fifteen minutes, and then
get off the stage.

Speaker 3 (01:18):
Keep them wanting more.

Speaker 2 (01:19):
She delivered everything she needed to last night as far
as the Democrats were concerned, because this was about vibes.

Speaker 3 (01:25):
Now, can vibes win an election?

Speaker 4 (01:27):
That?

Speaker 3 (01:27):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:28):
We're going to find out, but let's be real. Don't
change anything if you don't have to.

Speaker 5 (01:34):
You hear the criticism.

Speaker 6 (01:35):
Most she has to do more interviews she has to
talk about policy. Interesting from insiders you're speaking to you,
they're sort of like, no, yeah, absolutely, haven't needed to
do it so far.

Speaker 7 (01:44):
Why start now?

Speaker 8 (01:45):
If that's exactly it, They're concerned about her doing that
could potentially trip her up and give Trump some ammunition.
In fact, a lot of those Democrats I spoke to
today said avoid those policy prescriptions.

Speaker 9 (01:55):
Haven't heard from many voters looking for white papers and
policy papers. What they want to hear is what her
vision is for this country.

Speaker 3 (02:01):
The American people don't vote on policy prescriptions.

Speaker 10 (02:04):
I actually think the way the American people think about
this choice is less about the minutia of policy and
more about the direction of the country number one. And
secondly about the person character.

Speaker 4 (02:17):
It does matter.

Speaker 8 (02:18):
And Jerry Connolly, the Congress for Virginia there I asked
him more about this. He said, remember what Elizabeth Warren
did when she ran back in twenty twenty. She had
a white paper for every policy position under the sun.
And what happened She collapsed in the primary. So yeah,
the belief that perhaps you put more ideas on paper,
that's a bad idea. But the question voters want to
see some of those ideas, right, baby.

Speaker 4 (02:38):
But if you go with the vibes, it's a vibe
select right.

Speaker 8 (02:40):
That's right.

Speaker 2 (02:41):
Oh well, if you go with the vibes, it's all
that matters. And I played that because I want you
guys to understand. I don't think the honeymoon is going
to end. The only way the honeymoon ends is if
she's forced to have to change your streat and that's
going to come on September tenth, with the first debate,

(03:04):
this race.

Speaker 3 (03:07):
Just now getting started. This was the end of the beginning.
This was warmups. This was not.

Speaker 2 (03:15):
The oh my god, it's over, it's done now. No,
the serious stuff begins, not this Tuesday, but the following Tuesday,
Labor Day, a sprint of the finish line. Now, that's
when this begins. Can the vibes keep going? September tenth,
to me, is the most important day. If she is

(03:35):
halfway decent when it comes to the debate, she doesn't ramble,
she doesn't word salad. If she is half way decent,
that will be the only debate, and then the vibes
will continue. If she flails, if she words salads, if
she flip flops, if she goes all over the place.

(03:56):
She will then be forced to answer question. And when
you heard the cnnpit there talking about the white papers
that that's very racist, it's just shush about Elizabeth Warren
and her white papers her policy. Well then she lost, Yeah,
because people saw the policy was flawed and would have

(04:20):
been awful. That's the whole point. The whole point is
if you can just tell people they're gonna get all
the stuff they've ever dreamed of, government will answer every
question you have and take care of every need you have,
like a genie, then guess what you're gonna go and
do it, not understanding that maybe while the genie is

(04:42):
giving you something, it is then taking things away from
you that are gonna hurt you more. So can she
withstand that pressure if it ever gets there? And like
I said, I don't know if it's gonna get there.
I see my colleagues talking heads to the world talking hey, yeah, yeah,
this is gonna end. I don't know, because you just
heard them talk about it to vibes.

Speaker 3 (05:02):
They're not really curious to ask some questions. You will
get a few journalists that will.

Speaker 2 (05:08):
But until she is forced, why would you why would
you three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four to
twenty three at Chad Benson Show. Is your Twitter tweet
at us text the program. Love hearing from all of you.

Speaker 3 (05:22):
So last night I tweeted out last night.

Speaker 2 (05:25):
A about ten minutes before she went live, which they
were way more on time. And it also goes to
show you but first of all, there was no fiance.
How pissed was everybody? No t swift. A lot of
people thought George w was going to be there. I'd
heard that, I'd heard all kinds of things. Come to

(05:46):
find out that they kind of put the rumor out there,
and the rumor was, look at all this still wait
to hear and then what was it?

Speaker 3 (05:52):
She was the celebrity guest.

Speaker 2 (05:55):
But I tweeted out last night my prediction on how
VP Hair's speech will be received by the media.

Speaker 3 (05:59):
It's in credit amazing. You'll remember this for years.

Speaker 2 (06:02):
It will remind them of Barack in two thousand and eight,
give them shivers. That was before the speech had begun.

Speaker 11 (06:09):
It was a remarkable address, one that I've never seen
her give quite like this before, a very very powerful speech.
You gotta go back, I think, to Barack Obama in
two thousand and eight for a democratic speech like this,
perhaps even a speech like this at all.

Speaker 5 (06:28):
Well, if you didn't think you knew Kamala Harris before,
you may know her now. This was a powerful, strong, speech.

Speaker 3 (06:38):
You're going to remember where you were on this night.
This is an inflection point in history.

Speaker 2 (06:43):
That's why I don't think the honeymoon one. The speech
was the delivery. I'll give her an a the speech,
give her B overall, give her B plus a minus.
Supposed to talk a ton about policy, but that's what

(07:06):
the media and everybody else is going to have to
figure out where she stands on any of these things.
You're supposed to come out here and deliver the wish
list of the American people and how you're going to
fix all of their issues. I think she tried to
head to the center. Did she do a good job there? Ah?

Speaker 3 (07:30):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (07:32):
Her problem is they're trying to frame this as Donald
Trump is the incumbent. Donald Trump is the President of
the United States, and Donald Trump isn't. You're the incumbent,
so your advantage is right there, you're in this administration.
Her goal is how long can I go without having

(07:54):
to answer real questions? And how far can I get
away from Joe Biden.

Speaker 12 (08:00):
The Republican pushback, and I think there's some truth to this,
is that some of this is just substanceless pablem that
there's really no specificity in it, and that they ultimately
think they are going to be able to fire her
as the incumbent.

Speaker 3 (08:13):
And I think that's the question.

Speaker 12 (08:14):
That we're really going to be answering over the next
couple of months. How far can she run away from
Joe Biden to prevent the Republicans from portraying her as
the incumbent and then firing her as the incumbent. The
country is off on the wrong track, people believe it.
They still have economic anxiety. Can she shake off those
vibes and replace them with this sort of esoteric unity

(08:37):
vibe that they've been portraying.

Speaker 4 (08:38):
At the conviction?

Speaker 3 (08:41):
That's going to be the question.

Speaker 2 (08:43):
She can do all of those things if the media
doesn't ask questions, the journalists don't get out there and
ask questions, if they don't ask her any substate questions
about how you have gone from point A to point B,
because she has been all the place with her positions.

(09:06):
And I only say that because that's what we hear
from her surrogates, that she's changed, she's evolved.

Speaker 13 (09:16):
When she ran in twenty nineteen for president, she had
a lot of policy specific policy ideas that now we
only have paper statements that they are saying that's completely different. Banning, fracking,
where she is on medicare for all, immigration, all of
these things are a one eighty.

Speaker 3 (09:34):
Is she going to explain that to us?

Speaker 14 (09:36):
Well, she's been part of the Biden Harris administration.

Speaker 4 (09:39):
She's been in.

Speaker 3 (09:39):
Office exactly for the last half three and a half years.

Speaker 14 (09:42):
So she has a record of accomplishments that I'll put up.

Speaker 3 (09:45):
And that's one thing. I heard.

Speaker 2 (09:47):
No accomplishments last night. And are they going to ask questions?
She stood up there and she talked about Israel, and
you know they're going to stand with him. She talked
about Ukraine, talked about all those things. She talked about
how she went over there and met with fifty leaders
and brought everybody together.

Speaker 3 (10:04):
Is there any proof to back that up?

Speaker 2 (10:07):
If they're not curious enough to ask the questions, that
statement will just live out there as truth for a
lot of people. If you don't ask how you've gone
from banning fracking to now liking fracking because she didn't
mention she just glided by climate change last night. If

(10:28):
you're not going to ask your questions about immigration and
her role, or inflation and her role, then whatever she
says will be deemed the truth. That's why when you

(10:48):
hear the media fawn over her like that, Remember, they
feel in their mind they're kind of part of the resistance.

Speaker 3 (10:57):
Has she changed her mind on those things? I couldn't
tell you.

Speaker 2 (11:00):
Could she It's possible, But until somebody gets in front
of her and has serious questions with comebacks, it'll just
live as the truth three two, three, four, twenty three
Act you I'd been to show, should Twitter, your Instagram?
A lot of stuff to get to today. Little Friday

(11:21):
sounds coming up as well. It's happening at the box office.
Movies coming out this week and I'm curious to see
talk a.

Speaker 3 (11:31):
Bit about that. A lot of other stuff. We're not
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It is the jet Betti shoe.

Speaker 15 (13:10):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (13:12):
It is Friday, and you know what that means. We
get ready for the weekend of fund and frivolity, and uh,
let's just take a little peek back and see and
listen to all the craziness that happened this past week.

Speaker 16 (13:24):
We hereby called the in person portion of the forty
ninth Quadrinio Democratic National Convention to order.

Speaker 3 (13:33):
I spend the honor of my lifetime.

Speaker 4 (13:35):
The servers are president.

Speaker 1 (13:36):
I love the job, but I love my country more than.

Speaker 4 (13:40):
The old Lions last War.

Speaker 12 (13:41):
I think the Democrats want people to vote for her
based on a vibe.

Speaker 3 (13:46):
Outside of the convention. Their plan parent and is offering
free abortions, yes, best sectimies.

Speaker 17 (13:52):
Yeah, this is the party of abortion.

Speaker 18 (13:54):
Yes, politics at its worst can be ugly.

Speaker 19 (14:13):
They are trying to put forward male figures who can
speak to men out there who might not be the
sort of testosterone leaden, gun toting kind of guy.

Speaker 3 (14:26):
I did shoot myself in a leg when I was
falling backwards.

Speaker 20 (14:28):
Fine, Look, I think the reality is holding the media
accountable for their own lives is a necessary part of
running a campaign.

Speaker 21 (14:48):
The word that everybody is using to describe tonight as
bitter asweet, it's just better.

Speaker 3 (14:53):
Trump is over it. He does not want to be
the Republican nominee no more.

Speaker 22 (14:59):
It's the honor of my life to accept your nomination
for vice president of the United States.

Speaker 17 (15:06):
And the reason went long is because of all the
rackets applause.

Speaker 7 (15:08):
What what's wrong with you telling me women in jowdren murder?

Speaker 4 (15:13):
What is this.

Speaker 18 (15:16):
Fow wrong?

Speaker 4 (15:28):
Time?

Speaker 23 (15:29):
They spent three hundred million dollars on presidential campaigns. Twenty
four years later, you know what, they're expected to spend
ten billion.

Speaker 3 (15:36):
Quit whining about her.

Speaker 9 (15:37):
The campaign is not going to win. Talking about crowd.

Speaker 3 (15:40):
Sizes three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty
three at Chad Benson Show's your twitter tweeted? Is text
the program read here on The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 24 (15:50):
On behalf of everyone whose story could only be written
in the greatest nation on Earth.

Speaker 5 (16:00):
I accept your nomination.

Speaker 2 (16:07):
Vibes. It's about the vibes. It's a ViBe's election. But
policy matters.

Speaker 3 (16:16):
It does. And still have no idea.

Speaker 2 (16:19):
You know, last night I was going back and forth
with people on Twitter, which is not a smart thing
to do. Outside of a few people who, by the way,
hate everybody. I have noticed that because you'll go check
their Twitter and they're like, they're arguing with everyone. It
doesn't matter even if people that they agree with they argue.
Those are the people. Everybody's got a friend like that.
They'll take the opposite side on anything. And I just said,

(16:40):
you know, look, maybe her stuff is great, maybe she's changed,
maybe she's you know what, I don't know because she
doesn't talk, she doesn't respond to questions, she doesn't answer.

Speaker 3 (16:58):
Her quote unquote position and how they've changed.

Speaker 2 (17:04):
And because of that, it's fair to absolutely ask the question, well,
why were you this but now you're that?

Speaker 3 (17:12):
How did you go from here to there? What made
you do that?

Speaker 2 (17:17):
And a lot of people last night that I was
chatting with, they're like, you know what, I can respect that. Again,
many people, this is a personality based election, and the
personality is anybody but Trump because his personality is awful.

Speaker 3 (17:35):
You're missing the show. Grab the podcast. It is a
Chad Benson show, The.

Speaker 1 (17:40):
Chad Benson Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent Life.

Speaker 15 (18:04):
This is Chad Benson.

Speaker 9 (18:05):
The Death of one hundred and seventeen year old Maria
Ranyas in Spain led to a search by Gerontology Research Group,
which validates age details of those one hundred and ten
years old and older. They have found that Japan's to
Miki Atuca is now the oldest person on earth at
age one hundred and sixteen. She lives in a nursing
home in southeastern Japan, where they held a birthday party
for her last month. To Miki enjoys a yogurt drink

(18:26):
in the mornings and loves to eat bananas. When she
was told she's now the oldest person in the world,
her response was, thank you.

Speaker 3 (18:35):
Yeah, thanks appreciate that.

Speaker 2 (18:37):
They're always trying to figure out, like what makes some
of these people who have this insane longevity?

Speaker 4 (18:44):
What is it?

Speaker 2 (18:45):
The lady who passed away, her big thing was a
lot of them kind of had the same thing. Jeans
is a big part of because you'll hear one person
is like, well, I eat a banana and have yogurt,
and I go for walks and you know, and you're
like okay, and then the other person's like, I have
a pound of bacon and then I smoke two cigars
a day. Drink lots of liquor. That's that's a gene thing.
But I think the question moving forward for a lot
of people is how do we not.

Speaker 3 (19:07):
Only live longer.

Speaker 2 (19:08):
But it's not about the age, it's the quality, and
I think we're getting there. It's weird because I think
we're healthier than we've ever been. When people take care
of themselves, they're living longer, they're aging better. If you
didn't see Oprah the other night, she's seventy, she's the
best she's ever looked.

Speaker 3 (19:28):
Maybe.

Speaker 2 (19:29):
I mean, yes, it helps having a private chef and
all of those things, but even when she had all
that money, she struggled with everything.

Speaker 3 (19:35):
She looks amazing.

Speaker 2 (19:37):
In fact, I watched the clip going back in you know,
when she was heavier, but it was in the eighties
when she was interviewing Donald Trump, who, first of all,
doesn't really sound like Donald Trump, but everything that you
know he echoes today, he kind of echoed back then,
just in a softer, kinder way.

Speaker 14 (19:53):
I guess.

Speaker 2 (19:54):
But she looks great, she's aged, and she never she
said the other day, she never thought she'd make it
to seventy. So the longevity thing is important, but getting
there in a way that is good for you. We
talked the other day about the study forty four and
sixty those are when your those ages are when your

(20:15):
body takes you know, it's gradual decline. And then you
get to forty four and there's a big notice of
you're older, and then it's good.

Speaker 3 (20:24):
It's good.

Speaker 2 (20:25):
You get to sixty and it's oh my god, and
you know you hear about, well, I've got great hobbies
or which is big.

Speaker 3 (20:30):
By the way, the hobby thing is big.

Speaker 2 (20:32):
Having something you enjoy doing and then doing it is huge. Weightlifting, though,
and stretching flexibility because what ends up usually hurting and
or killing somebody as they get older is they're not strong,
their bones get brittle, they don't have muscle, and they fall.

(20:54):
Stretching every day may add years to your life, according
to a new study. While it's widely known, they say
physical fit in this place a crucial role in health
and longevity. Most researchers have focused on cardiovascular fitness and strength.
The study that they've done here, though, does break new
ground and helps people in survival rates, especially when and

(21:14):
if you fall Overall body flexibility, the flex index they
call it, is massive, so they did study. Scandinavian Journal
of Medical and Science and Sports had about thirty two
hundred middle age adults, men and women between the ages
of forty six and sixty five. These participants part of
the climenex Exercise, Cohort and Rio de Janeiro. So they

(21:40):
followed the participants for thirteen years. This is an easy
thing to do, right, You're like, well, this should be easy.
They tracked everything health, outcome, survival rates. Where they found though,
that was striking. Individuals with a higher flex index score
had a significantly lower risk of debt during the follow

(22:00):
up period, even as you're older, even as your BMI
was higher or what you would consider, you know that
overall health, if you were flexible, you fared better. That's crazy, No,
it's not. I mean you think about it, same thing
with strength, same thing. But like you know, that's why
you lift weights, you stretch. That's big time. Like that

(22:25):
helps you in ways and and a lot of this
has to do with the fact that you get older,
you fall things. I played pick a ball and last
couple of weeks I've seen guys who are in their
sixties and seventies fall, but they're flexible and they're strong,
never ever stopped playing. They got up, played had fun

(22:45):
where other people their age, who aren't flexible, who don't
work out, who aren't strong, that may have broken their
arms and their hips.

Speaker 3 (22:55):
And you know what happens in the hip breaks three.

Speaker 2 (22:57):
Two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty three
atchad Benson show to your Twitter, your Instagram, all of
the other things. Adam Kinsinger there last night where Chicago.

Speaker 25 (23:06):
I never thought i'd be here, but listen, you never
thought you'd see me here, did you. But I've learned
something about the Democratic Party, and I want to let
my fellow Republicans in on the secret. The Democrats are
as patriotic as us. They love this country just as much.

Speaker 4 (23:27):
As we do.

Speaker 3 (23:29):
Yeah, there's no doubt about that. There was a big
theme this week.

Speaker 2 (23:35):
I've always thought, I mean, you know, we're all Americans.
The difference is the Republicans embrace it, and when they
embrace it, the Democrats who are trying to take it back,
as a lot of people are saying, the Democrats called
you a nationalist. You're a nationalist, right you and your jingoism,
you're nationalism. And now that they're trying to embrace it,

(23:57):
like we're taking it back. He took it from you,
you gave it up. And then when anybody embraced America
and loved America, you criticized them as being far right nationalist,
which is ridiculous. More from Adam Kinsinger.

Speaker 25 (24:13):
Donald Trump is a weak man pretending to be strong.

Speaker 3 (24:18):
He is a small.

Speaker 25 (24:20):
Man pretending to be big. He's a faithless man pretending
to be righteous.

Speaker 3 (24:27):
He's a perpetrator who.

Speaker 25 (24:29):
Can't stop playing the victim. Donald Trump has suffocated the
soul of.

Speaker 3 (24:34):
The Republican Party.

Speaker 25 (24:36):
His fundamental weakness has coursed through my party like an illness,
whipping us into a fever that has untethered us from
our values.

Speaker 2 (24:46):
I saw a lot of people blast Adam Kinsinger last night,
and that's understandable because you're there blasting Donald Trump. You're
not blasting the Republican and platform, the conservative platform, but
a man that you can't stand and you feel that

(25:08):
you have to do this. And we're going to get
into a little bit next hour. How are they going
to be remembered when all is said and done. Because
this is the last ride of Donald win or lose,
This is it, and where does Republicans go from here.
We know where the Democrats are going because last night
was historic.

Speaker 26 (25:27):
All right, you will remember where you were when you
heard this speech tonight from the Vice President of the
United States, Kamala Harris, really introducing herself to the nation,
speaking as much to Republicans and Independents as she was
to the Democrats who were nominating her tonight, asking Americans
to remember how great their country is and to fight
for its values. You're going to remember where you were

(25:50):
on this night. This is an inflection point in history.

Speaker 3 (25:55):
You're going to remember where you were this night.

Speaker 2 (25:59):
It's odd to think that she's introducing herself to America
when she's the vice president of the United States. But
let's not forget she ran. She failed miserably. She didn't
even make it to Iowa. She's still, by the way,
never got to vote in any primary. That being said,

(26:21):
she's introducing herself to America. And I said yesterday, this
is something you never see in life. She's getting a
second chance to make a first impression. But a lot
of people already know who she is, and this is
going to be the Republican's battle for the next seventy
days plus.

Speaker 3 (26:42):
How do you.

Speaker 2 (26:45):
Make sure that you remind America she's not new, and
she's also part of this administration and Trump is not
running this They have been and she's part of they.
And she was the one who liked to say she
wanted to be the last one in the.

Speaker 4 (27:02):
Room with Biden.

Speaker 2 (27:05):
She's still not answered that question either, which I think
we've all forgotten about because Biden is such an afterthought,
is he not?

Speaker 3 (27:12):
She came out last night. We want to thank Joe.

Speaker 2 (27:15):
Okay, enough of that, But I think there's another question
that nobody's even talking about because we're like, what about
policy this and other? Hey, out of curiosity, what did
you know about the old guy that everybody in the
air world seemed to know? And you continued to tell
us that he's great Biden closed doors, he's doing handstands

(27:37):
and blah blah. What did you know and when did
you know it? Because if you tell me that you
knew nothing, that tells me you weren't the last person
in the room, that he didn't have anything to do
with you, or you're lying.

Speaker 3 (27:54):
Oh yeah, I never thought about that. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four twenty three at Chad Benson, it's
your Twitter tweet at us text the program. I do
love hearing from all of you.

Speaker 2 (28:05):
Somebody text me yesterday, and I get a lot of
this because they hate Trump. And this guy and I
go back and forth all time and very respectful, but he,
you know, he's like, look, Trump got a great economy
from Obama, and Biden got all of.

Speaker 3 (28:28):
The bad stuff from Trump. I said, So, what you
mean to tell me is.

Speaker 2 (28:33):
The economy was good only because of Obama under Trump,
and the economy and the struggles that are going on
now are because of Trump. So that's like saying heads
eye wind tails, you lose. At what point does the
presidency belong to the president?

Speaker 3 (28:55):
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And that's what it is. Dog Food's dead food, Rough
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give your dog become healthier and in turn gonna make
your dog healthy, which I love.

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It's gonna help with their aches and their pains and
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(29:48):
Roughgreens dot com slash Chad. Sprinkle it on top of your
dog's food, don't change anything else. Watch what happens. Your
dog's gonna love it. You're gonna love what it does
for your dog. Roughgreens dot com slash chi Chad Benson.

Speaker 27 (30:00):
Show serving up talk radio medium, rare and dripping with irony.

Speaker 15 (30:16):
It's Chad Benson.

Speaker 4 (30:18):
The song Freedom.

Speaker 7 (30:19):
It's become a theme song for Vice President Kamala Harris's
presidential campaign with the blessing of Beyonce, so when Donald
Trump's team tried to use it, they got pushback. The
song appeared in an online video for the Trump campaign,
playing over images of Trump's stepping off his plane. Beyonce's
label and publisher said not so fast, sending a seasoned
desist letter to the former President's people. The Trump video
has since been removed. The news first reported by Rolling Stone.

(30:40):
It's far from the first time music artists have told
Trump to stop using their stuff. Celine Dion, Aerosmith, Rihanna,
and Moore have all had similar issues.

Speaker 2 (30:47):
And they always will because that's not their politics, and
they hate him.

Speaker 3 (30:53):
I mean, you can say what you want about.

Speaker 2 (30:57):
Theocrats and their beliefs and all of that, but when
it comes to putting on a show, they put on
a much better show.

Speaker 3 (31:07):
They did.

Speaker 2 (31:08):
They put on a much better show, and they got
bigger stars they do now some and I remember was.

Speaker 4 (31:20):
It.

Speaker 2 (31:21):
D Schneider hated the fact that Trump was playing We're
not going to take it or one of those.

Speaker 3 (31:26):
Of course, he's the lead singer Twist his sister.

Speaker 2 (31:28):
But he said, there's nothing I could do about it
because they paid for it, and so it's theirs to use.

Speaker 3 (31:37):
Oh man, Yeah, they're not a fan. They're not a fan.

Speaker 2 (31:40):
Last night, everybody thought Bay was going to be there.
Everybody thought t Swift. I thought I'd heard everything from
Beyonce Taylor Swift to even George W. Bush potentially showing up.
But no, they put out their own rumors.

Speaker 28 (31:54):
Fucking anticipation here and elsewhere that there may be a
special guest. I am told by Denmarks that Kamala Harris
was their guest. They did not want a celebrity at
the end of this convention to essentially compete with her.
One senior advisor telling me, this is a deadly serious election.
And if you looked at the end of this program,

(32:15):
having a Leon pineticam on, the former Defense secretary really
presenting Vice President Harris as a plausible commander in chief.
That is one of the reasons I'm told that there
was not a celebrity performance at the end.

Speaker 2 (32:26):
And we talked about it last week when I told
you guys, they also didn't want a bunch of celebrities
being seen coming on stage telling flyover America, Middle America

(32:51):
that your beliefs, your like of Donald Trump is stupid
and ignorant, and because of that devote this way. They
didn't want to come across as elitist, which is a
smart thing. It is very smart thing to do. They've
played this thing pretty damn good. I saw Aliens the

(33:15):
other day.

Speaker 3 (33:16):
That's pretty sweet transition right there. I did. I saw Aliens,
and I thought it was good. This new alien movie.

Speaker 2 (33:22):
But this movie this weekend, I might go see and
it's near and dear to my heart. But this movie's
just coming out. Yeah, but it's also kind of a
reminder of what we lost.

Speaker 7 (33:34):
Actress Zoe Kravitz makes her directorial debut with Blink Twice,
a stylish psychological thriller that tackles themes of abuse and power,
which he co wrote. Nailomi Aki stars as a woman
drawn to the island playground of a billionaire played by
Channing Tatum.

Speaker 3 (33:48):
It's a great place to bring friends.

Speaker 7 (33:49):
Blink Twice We'll compete with the remake of The Crow
to be the top new release of this weekend, though
neither film is expected to help end the summer season
on a spectacular note. Both looking at less than a
ten million dollars debut, last week's champ Ilian Romuluz could
repeat a number one.

Speaker 2 (34:03):
It's The Crow, I remember man. If you guys don't
know The Crow, if you're maybe. It was a comic
book and was supposed to be the launching pad for
Brandon Lee Bruce Lee Sun.

Speaker 3 (34:15):
He had done a couple of movies. He was going
to be the.

Speaker 2 (34:18):
It and he died on set very similar to what
took place with the Baldwin. It was a gun. Something happened.
It was fragments of a shell of a blank. It
hit him and he died on set. And I was like, man,
so they've remade it now, and sometimes the remakes are good,

(34:42):
sometimes they're not so good. So we'll see how this goes.
Not that it's going to stop any of the powers
that are out there that are just massive. I didn't
even know it's coming out this weekend, but you know,
when you're trying to take your mind off stuff, right,
there's so much politics and chaos out there for once
in a while, you just want to sit down and

(35:03):
watch a damn movie.

Speaker 3 (35:05):
And I did enjoy Alien. It was totally.

Speaker 2 (35:10):
Not a remake, not a redo, not adjacent to the
other Alien. It was like its own standalone movie, which
I enjoyed three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four,
twenty three at Chad Benson Show. That is your Twitter,
your tweet at us, text the program as well, leave

(35:31):
a voicemail there if you'd like to as well, and
check out the Instagram at Chad Benson Show. Right here
on the Chad Benson Show coming up next hour. What
does the GOP do. Now that is a very big
question because it is on this is it no more vibes?

(35:52):
As far as you know the GOP. You let them
have their week. They did it. Now what is your
plan of attack?

Speaker 3 (36:01):
Now?

Speaker 2 (36:01):
What is your plan to get your message out there?
Not just from Donald Trump, because we think it's only.

Speaker 3 (36:08):
Donald Trump, but if you're a Senate, if you're a
congress person, if you're in a tight race, what is
your plan from here on out? How do you get
your message out there in a way that resonates?

Speaker 2 (36:20):
Talk about that a lot of other stuff you missed
any show, Grab the podcast, Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (36:24):
This is the Chad Benson Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent Life.

Speaker 15 (36:54):
This is Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (36:55):
You know, if the DNC wrapped up, something didn't happen
at the DSCY.

Speaker 3 (37:00):
There was vibes, kids, There was plenty of vibes. Don't
you forget?

Speaker 2 (37:03):
That wasn't any chaos outside of a few incidents here
or there when it came to the protesters. And I
was watching something yesterday Vivik Ramaswami, who I like, by
the way, it comes across at times as a turd,
and I think he's learned his lesson.

Speaker 3 (37:26):
Being on that stage in the debates.

Speaker 2 (37:29):
I think his wife looked at him and says, you
know you're coming across as a turd, right, you know,
you know you're turning a lot of people off. No
matter how great your argument is, it isn't working because
you come across as a smug jerk. So he was
at the DNC and went outside to talk to the protesters.

(37:52):
And one of the things that I think America should understand.
Chicago was ready for it. Their police chief, all of
their law enforcement said no, you are not going to
do that. You are not going to do the things

(38:12):
that you've done in other places. You're going to protest,
maybe you stop traffic. I saw that they did that,
But you're not going to rampage, get in areas. You're
not supposed to break up meetings, do it. That's not
happening here, which I thought was a great message to
send to everybody else.

Speaker 29 (38:30):
I'm asking you, yep, that you have no right to
be here if you're not in support of the Palestinian people. Well,
I think if you're not going to call, you have
the right to do. You're not going to call to
the genocide. And it ends with a chilling yes, and
it ends the support.

Speaker 4 (38:47):
Of Israel, then you should take off. We don't want
you here, you're not welcome.

Speaker 20 (38:51):
Well, the good news is we're in America and so
we actually get to all express ourselves, express.

Speaker 4 (38:55):
Being a racist. You get you get to express being
a racist.

Speaker 30 (38:59):
Zion Racists go home, Racists go.

Speaker 3 (39:14):
It's kind of funny they.

Speaker 2 (39:16):
I think they thought, first of all, they believe there
was going to be more people there because they were
being dold. They were expecting one hundred thousand people, and
there was a decent amount, but nowhere near what I
think they thought that they were going to have. And
I also think they thought, oh, we're gonna get there
and it's going to be like business as usual.

Speaker 3 (39:35):
Everywhere we go. People recognize the.

Speaker 2 (39:38):
Power that we have, and how dare they even pretend
that they're going to stop us from doing whatever we
want to do. They're telling us we can't get near
the building. We'll get near it, we'll go in it
if we want to. And then they looked up and
they're like, they put up two walls and there's a
bunch of guys with sticks who look like they're going
to use them. Smart smart, indeed, last night.

Speaker 24 (39:59):
Guess on behalf of everyone whose story could only be
written in the greatest nation on Earth.

Speaker 5 (40:10):
I accept your nomination.

Speaker 3 (40:13):
To be Presidence the United.

Speaker 5 (40:15):
States of America.

Speaker 2 (40:18):
There you go, Kamala. She is now the nominee. So
the sprint is on and it's all about vibes.

Speaker 4 (40:28):
Baby.

Speaker 2 (40:28):
We talked about that, how long can vibes last? Her
speech was she delivered her speech. Well, in that situation,
you are a you're an actor and actress. We'll always
talk about Trump, right, goes on too long, and everything's
crowd work. He's not good at reading the telepronct because

(40:48):
Trump wants to ooh, piece of candy. Situation, he sees
something that he's saying and he goes, oh, I got
an antidote for that, or I want to go here,
I want to say something else, and he plays the
crowd and that's where he gets himself in an out
of trouble. But it's also where it makes us laugh.
But she came out and she delivered what she had
to and one of the things that you know she did,

(41:12):
she didn't flub her lines. I think I give her
an a minus is she tried to talk about being
a president for everybody.

Speaker 24 (41:22):
And let me say, I know there are people of
various political views watching tonight, and I want you to
know I promised to be a president for all Americans.

Speaker 5 (41:34):
You can always trust me to put country above party
and self.

Speaker 3 (41:43):
Okay, sounds great. Can you.

Speaker 2 (41:49):
Have you changed? Rettbare played last time. I want play
again because I think it needs to be talked about.
She's been all over with her positions from where she
was a few years ago to where she is now.

Speaker 13 (42:05):
When she ran in twenty nineteen for president, she had
a lot of policy specific policy ideas that now we
only have paper statements that they are saying that's completely different.
Banning fracking, where she is on Medicare for all, immigration,
all of these things are a one point eighty.

Speaker 3 (42:23):
Is she going to explain that to us?

Speaker 14 (42:24):
Well, she's been part of the Biden Harris administration.

Speaker 4 (42:27):
She's been in.

Speaker 3 (42:28):
Office exactly for the last half three and a half years.

Speaker 14 (42:31):
So she has a record of accomplishments that I'll put up.

Speaker 2 (42:36):
She didn't talk about her accomplishments last night, but she
does need to answer why she has changed all of
her positions on things, and everybody's like she's changed and
I'm like, has she because I haven't heard. I'm going
to tell you, guys the Kirsten Cinema Arizona. When she

(43:02):
went to the Senate, she was hardcourt lefty the years before,
she's a centrist. Now she left the Democratic Party. She
changed her stripes. If you will, now, is that what
Gama's going to do? I have no idea. Is that

(43:24):
who she is? I have no idea. I don't think so.
But is it possible?

Speaker 4 (43:32):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (43:33):
The only way to.

Speaker 2 (43:35):
Get that across to the American people is actually talk
to the American people. Explain why you've gone from point
A to point B. You may have, you know, because
you know it's like I remember a Barack Obama. First
thing I can do is close Guantanamo Bay. Then you
get in there and they're like, this is why you're
not doing that, And he's like, oh, that's a different perspective.

(43:56):
I had no idea what that was about.

Speaker 3 (44:02):
And maybe all the stuff she talks about.

Speaker 2 (44:05):
She gets in there and you're like, hey, look you
were looking at it on the ground floor. Let us
give you a snapshot from the roof. It looks totally different.

Speaker 3 (44:18):
And if i'm her people, first of all, I don't.

Speaker 2 (44:20):
Let her do any interviews, not until she absolutely must.

Speaker 3 (44:26):
They were talking about that last night.

Speaker 6 (44:28):
You hear the criticism most she has to do more interviews,
she has to talk about policy. Interesting from insiders you're
speaking to you, they're sort of like, no, yeah, absolutely,
haven't needed to do it so far.

Speaker 7 (44:38):
Why start now?

Speaker 3 (44:39):
And that's exactly it.

Speaker 8 (44:40):
They're concerned about her doing that could potentially trip her
up and give Trump some ammunition. In fact, a lot
of those Democrats I spoke to today said avoid those
policy prescriptions.

Speaker 31 (44:49):
I haven't heard from many voters looking for white papers
and policy papers.

Speaker 9 (44:52):
What they want to hear is what her vision is
for this country.

Speaker 3 (44:55):
The American people don't vote on policy prescriptions.

Speaker 10 (44:58):
I actually think the way the Americans people think about
this choice was less about the minutia policy and more
about the direction of the country number one. And secondly
about the person character.

Speaker 4 (45:10):
It does matter.

Speaker 8 (45:12):
And Jerry Connolly the conversation for Virginia there, I asked
him more about this. He said, remember what Elizabeth Warren
did when she ran back in twenty twenty. She had
a white paper for every policy position under the sun.
And what happened She collapsed in the primary. So yeah,
I believe that perhaps you put more ideas on paper.
That's a bad idea, but the questions voters want to
see some of those ideas, right, babe.

Speaker 3 (45:32):
But if you go with the vibes, it's a vibe select, right,
that's right, vibe selection.

Speaker 2 (45:36):
But the reason that she collapsed is because people saw
the policy and realized it was bad and it was
never going to work, realized that it was insane.

Speaker 3 (45:45):
Say what you want about Bernie and Elizabeth.

Speaker 2 (45:47):
They are who they are, they live who they live,
as far as there's you know, they believe in a
socialist ideology. They want to you know, they want to
redistribute wealth, et cetera, et cetera. She put it out
there and the people got to look at it and said, no,
that's not for us.

Speaker 3 (46:07):
And the fear is and rightly so.

Speaker 2 (46:09):
And what the Republicans have to absolutely capitalize on is
she's not changed the things that she believed four years
ago she believes today. She's telling you she's changed kind
of sort of but not really through statements and surrogates.

(46:29):
But she has to explain otherwise don't believe it. And
if you're the Republicans, you better figure out a way
to make sure that you tie her to this administration.

Speaker 3 (46:40):
And you better make sure you.

Speaker 2 (46:41):
Figure out how you tie her to her statements in
the past, because if you don't, people.

Speaker 3 (46:50):
Will buy into it.

Speaker 2 (46:51):
Now, maybe she has Maybe she comes out and says, look,
I saw the world in a much different way being
a senator for a state. It's not the same thing
as being a vice president seeing the fact that the
impact that China could have on US, Russia oil, we
need to drill. Banning fracking would be stupid, it would

(47:12):
hamsterring us, it would make us, really put us in
a bad situation when it comes to being able to
control the energy. And she come up with these and
you can say, okay, maybe, but she doesn't. She just
has statements to go I'm not for banning frack. Make
her answer those questions and make sure that you tie

(47:36):
her to this administration as if she has no idea
who Joe Biden is.

Speaker 3 (47:41):
I think you're going to go a long way with that.

Speaker 2 (47:45):
And when you heard that sound bite about the vibes,
just go back to Elizabeth Warren had white papers. She
let everybody know her policy. They took one look at
her policy, destroyed it because it was bad policy, and
then she disappeared in the race at that time. Make

(48:06):
her answer those questions and you got a great shot.
If not, whatever she says, the media roll with people
who are low information voters to no information voters will
vote fives three, two, three, five, three eight, twenty four
to twenty three. Atch had Benson show should twitter patriotic?

Speaker 3 (48:26):
Last night?

Speaker 2 (48:27):
We'll talk a bit about that. But first raycon speaking
of patriotic. The best earbuds around because America. They're incredible
sound quality, second to not noise cancelation, whether in sweat resistant,
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Speaker 3 (48:46):
Charging which was great because yesterday had to fast charge him.

Speaker 2 (48:48):
It took virtually no time, multi connectivity, eight hours talk time,
thirty two hours of battery life, narrow stems, no wires.
The best earbuds they are. What I love is I
had in my earbuds because I ad anything. You did
all kinds of stuff yesday, probably ten hours I add
my earbuds in. Never hurt my ears, never did, never

(49:10):
bugged me. It was incredible. Then I took a little
cat nap. What noise cancelation on?

Speaker 4 (49:15):
Oh my god, it was amazing.

Speaker 2 (49:17):
If you want the best earbuds around fit feel, comfort,
style sound. It's the every day earbuds from Raycon. Get
your everyday earbuds now. I'm gonna save you fifteen percent
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(49:37):
slash Chad sid Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 15 (49:50):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 19 (49:52):
You can see it on the screen in person to
see this sea of American flags that were given out
to all of the Dell Patriotism is definitely the watchword
here tonight. It is not an accident that this is
what they are leaning into. This is the theme of
one of the main themes of Kamala Harris's discussion and

(50:15):
what they say they are trying to reclaim from Republicans.

Speaker 2 (50:20):
First of all, Republicans never took that away. Democrats, you
gave that up. And it's great to see. I've said
for years Democrats are as patriotic as Republicans because we're Americans.
We love our country. But somewhere along the line over
the last six years or so mostly due to the
fact you got young people coming out of college who

(50:42):
feel that America's evil and bad. You guys have decided
to turn away from the patriotism because colonialism or whatever
BSU came up with. It's not about reclaiming it. It
was never there. You decided to say, nah, no, makes
us feel bad, we don't want to do it. Last
night you saw a ton of that. Scott Jennings also

(51:04):
at seeing it.

Speaker 12 (51:05):
When I saw these American flags in here, I was thinking,
what have we identified with the left for the last
few months in this country? Waving around the Palestinian flags
that has bull of flags, everything we've seen on campuses,
it out in the streets. They did not permit any
of that to permeate the hall. That was an important thing.
Republicans ought to pay attention to this. The Democrats, Robison

(51:26):
not going to see this ground and the American flag
waving still means something to every single one of us.
I thought it was really smart to hand them out.
Even at the end they had larger the big ones
up there.

Speaker 3 (51:36):
Yeah, that bitter. That's a powerful image.

Speaker 12 (51:39):
Look, if we're going to have more patriotism in our
politics this fall, I'm.

Speaker 3 (51:45):
For it, no matter which party's doing it. So I
thought that was a wise choice.

Speaker 12 (51:48):
And I think it's good because we've seen some disturbing
stuff on the streets of America for the last several
months and I'd like to do away with that.

Speaker 3 (51:55):
And I thought that was a good thing they did.
I think he's right.

Speaker 2 (51:59):
Remember when I hear people say, well, we're going to
take this back from the Republicans, Republicans didn't take it away.

Speaker 3 (52:05):
You gave it up. You did, you.

Speaker 2 (52:09):
Decided that no colonialism, it's evil, it's bad. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson's show.
Is your Twitter tweet at us text the program right
here on the Chad Benson Show. And I'm talking about

(52:32):
the younger generation. I'm not talking about a forty five
year old Democrat. I'm talking about a younger generation who's
on the streets marching and burning the American flag and
talking about down with America. And you grabbed it and said, no,
this is who we are, this is what we're about.
But to say that you're taking it back means that
the Republicans took it from you. No, they just decided

(52:54):
to fly their flag all the time and not be ashamed.
It's ViBe's election. Talk about that lots. I mean, you know, again,
the race doesn't begin until after Labor Day.

Speaker 3 (53:11):
She'll get a bump next week. How big of a
bump will it be?

Speaker 2 (53:16):
Was this already kind of built into what we've seen
over the last month and a half. And where does
she go from here? Does she continue on the course
that she's been on. I'm a believer if I'm you know,
advising the Democrats, if it ain't broke, don't fix it,
don't do something that you must do in your mind

(53:37):
until you absolutely have to. And the funny thing is,
I continue to say, you know, last night and talking
with Jim Kennedy. Kennedy has in the public policy research.
We're going to talk to him a little bit. I
said over and over again to Jim last night. I
don't think the honeymoon period is going to end anytime soon.
I think they're gonna ride this much longer than people realize,

(53:58):
until they're either exposed like Biden was during a debate,
and they have no choice but to then talk about
issues that she is failing on. But until then, they're
going to ride this honeymoon period, both of them three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three.

Speaker 3 (54:14):
That Chad Benson Show's your Twitter tweet at us texta program.
It is the Chad Benson.

Speaker 32 (54:18):
Show, the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (54:40):
Independent Thoughts, Independent Life. This is Chad Benson.

Speaker 3 (54:45):
That includes IVF. And this gets personal for me and
my family.

Speaker 4 (54:50):
When my wife and I decided to have.

Speaker 33 (54:51):
Children, we spent years going through infertility treatments, and I
remember praying every night for a call for good news,
the pit stomach when the phone rang, and the agony
when we heard that the treatments hadn't worked. So it
wasn't by chance that when we welcome our daughter into
the world, we named her Hope.

Speaker 2 (55:11):
That was Tim Walls the other night, And I bring
him up because if you didn't see it, first of all,
pretty damn good speech, and it was only seventeen minutes,
So that's a win right there.

Speaker 3 (55:23):
Le's his more people, How many times would I tell
you that? But his son Gus.

Speaker 2 (55:31):
Kind of became an Internet star and then was picked
upon by ass hats who thought it was because he
was crying and he was excited, only to find out
that They're all like, that's my bad. I didn't know
he was special needs. I didn't know that he was
on the spectrum. I didn't know he had these things.

Speaker 4 (55:48):
That's to.

Speaker 3 (55:50):
First of all, he's a kid. Okay, what are you doing.

Speaker 2 (55:57):
Whether or not he he has is on the spectrum
or any of that stuff. He's a kid. That's how
nasty our politics has gotten. And Colter apologized several others,

(56:18):
and it's.

Speaker 3 (56:19):
Just you know.

Speaker 2 (56:22):
This one guy who's a another talk show host, you know,
came out called them blubbering, bitch boy, sorry, but this
is embarrassing both father and son.

Speaker 3 (56:35):
Blah blah blah blah blah, and then goes, oh, I'm sorry,
I didn't know he was on the spectrum. My bad.
I've taken down the post. What are you doing?

Speaker 2 (56:45):
Honestly, Trump's kids, Eric Laura don Jr. Absolutely free to criticize.
I never criticized Obamas kids because they wanted to stay
out of the spotlight, and you shouldn't be criticizing them.

(57:08):
Why could you criticize Trump's kid because they're in the spotlight.
They're there, they're part of it. I don't get it.
This want to demean the other side and make fun of.

Speaker 3 (57:28):
Them is so ridiculous.

Speaker 2 (57:34):
And I'm just you know, you sit here and you
think to yourself, can we do better?

Speaker 3 (57:42):
Or is this?

Speaker 2 (57:43):
It?

Speaker 3 (57:43):
Is this what we've become now?

Speaker 2 (57:46):
And you can go online right now to Twitter and
any of these things and see people just tearing this
kid apart.

Speaker 3 (57:52):
And the weird thing is, you know, like and colder.
A bunch of people went.

Speaker 2 (57:55):
Out and Matt Walsh Ben Shapiro are like, what are
you people doing? This is what makes Republicans look like
ass hats.

Speaker 3 (58:05):
You gotta do better.

Speaker 2 (58:09):
And whether or not he was on the spectrum, he is,
and he's got ADHD, he's got nonverbal issues, all shouldn't matter.
He's still a kid. His daughter was there. She's not
a kid, but you know what she'd asked for this.
It's just so like because people are so addicted to

(58:30):
the clicks. That's their currency in their world, the clicks,
the blue check mark clicks. Oh my god, I got
him there? Who go to work there today? Did you
see what I did on Twitter? Fifty five thousand million likes?

Speaker 3 (58:49):
Look at me? Look at that. I'm gonna take that
to the bank.

Speaker 2 (58:52):
Idiots three two, three, five, three eight twenty four to
twenty three at Chad Benson Show is your Twitter tweet
at his text the program.

Speaker 3 (59:02):
She's not doing any interviews. We know that, and we
keep saying that's important.

Speaker 2 (59:07):
She's gonna have to do some interviews, I hope at
some time, and September tenth will be the most important day,
in my opinion, in this election, barring any crazy, you know,
black swan event that takes place, because that's a debate
and it may be the only way to get her
to answer real questions is if she fails miserably and

(59:32):
goes Biden in the debate. But one of the things
that's interesting is the battle that's going on between new
media world influencers and the traditional media, the trad media,
the establishment media. This is Colby Hall from The Hill,
one of the editors over there, talking about, you know,

(59:53):
the honeymoon still going, but then you know.

Speaker 3 (59:55):
Talking about the fact that death.

Speaker 2 (59:58):
Social media is playing a big role in this for her,
and she finds a much friendlier venue there.

Speaker 34 (01:00:07):
It says a ton I mean, honestly, it's you know,
I have two boys who are twenty one and seventeen.
About six weeks ago they asked me about Project twenty
twenty five. Now, I love my boys very much, and
I told them that we're going through a historic political
period and they should dial in. But they don't follow
the news like I do, thankfully. And the fact that
they had learned about Project twenty twenty five from TikTok

(01:00:30):
and Instagram, I thought was illustrative of just how people
get this Now. I saw a video on TikTok yesterday
of Kamala Harris doing something called track Star. He's an influencer,
music influencer who it's like named that tune, and it
was a great clip, and Kamala Harris was able to
identify Miles Davis and roy Ers and Earth Wind and.

Speaker 17 (01:00:48):
Fire or whatever.

Speaker 34 (01:00:49):
But part of me was like, really, she has time
for like a TikTok influencer, but she can't take any
questions from anyone else, So, you know, but that's pretty
bold that they're just ignoring journalism and opting for influencers.
But they want to rally the youth vote, so you
can see the logic. It's just a little offensive to

(01:01:10):
US journalists who are trying to get some time with it.

Speaker 3 (01:01:13):
She doesn't care.

Speaker 2 (01:01:15):
Again, she doesn't have to answer any questions she's not
going to. That's why September tenth is going to be
very important that Trump comes out and does what he
needs to do. And this is where if I was
advising Trump less is more, stick to the issues, do
not get personal, and make her explain why all these

(01:01:43):
things she once stood for she's now flipped on, and
why she's done that not just because oh I did,
I just thought it was better. Why is it to
get elected? But journalists, I blame this on you, because
as much as he's saying there, well, it's kind of
an insult to journalists, they're also singing her praises. They're

(01:02:11):
also talking about what kind of vibes it is, and well,
I wouldn't answer questions if I don't have to too.
And you're gonna remember where you were this night. It
said that right there says a lot because you're not
holding her feet to the fire.

Speaker 3 (01:02:24):
If all the journalists got together and said we are
not going to.

Speaker 2 (01:02:29):
Cover her until she actually starts talking to us, and
that she is obviously hiding something and we need to
find out what that is, and you start conveying that
to the campaign over and over again, they're finally gonna go.

Speaker 3 (01:02:45):
Okay, now we need to do this, but they're not
going to.

Speaker 2 (01:02:51):
And then they can't get pissed that she goes over
because she has an issue because the eighteen to twenty
four year olds which are going to vote to vote
for in. I mean, they could pretend like they're not
going to, like, oh it's all about Guyza, and they're
going to You saw those people protesting, they're showing up,
they're gonna vote. Well, they may not show up because
they're kids and when we were kids, we always didn't

(01:03:12):
show up everything. But she knows she needs to go there.
But she also knows going there it's a safe place.
It's a safe space. It really is, because they're gonna
ask her silly questions like what's it like being the
vice president? Is their force too cool? What do you
think of this new track from so and so? They're
not asking her.

Speaker 3 (01:03:32):
So you used to want to give.

Speaker 2 (01:03:36):
Everybody that came to this country illegally free healthcare? So
before we get to Miles Davis, what do you stand
on that? And why have you moved? She's not getting
that there. So she's gonna go there, and she's afraid,
like if I go over here, these people may ask
me real questions. They're not going to She's gonna go
on mad Ow. She'll be fine, She'll go on whatever

(01:04:00):
friendly thing. She'll do just enough where all she has
to do is get one serious question.

Speaker 3 (01:04:11):
And she can get out of it easily. And then
it'll be up.

Speaker 2 (01:04:14):
To Donald Trump to make sure that on September tenth,
he does more than enough. That gets them to push
even harder.

Speaker 3 (01:04:29):
But of course they're upset.

Speaker 2 (01:04:30):
Well, I mean, look, if you can think about some
of these people, the amount of viewers they get on
their YouTube, on their tiktoks and all of the things,
and seeing as we live in a clip world, they
get more viewers, they get more viewers watching their episodes

(01:04:51):
or watching their clips. Then the CNNs, the Foxes, all
of this stuff, so that's also a bonus. And they're
pissed because media has changed and there's like three hundred
influencers there and they got to be on the floor.
That's the other crazy thing. They gave out all of

(01:05:14):
these passes and credentials and they got to be on
the floor, so that I think that pissed them off.
It's the battle of three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 3 (01:05:30):
It's your Twitter, your Instagram, I love the other things. Buddy.
Zach Abraham's going to join the program in a bit.
We're going to talk about the jobs report, the revision.
What's it mean? Talk about that coming up?

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Speaker 3 (01:06:51):
It's a Chad ben to.

Speaker 35 (01:06:52):
Show a hashtag me too, hashtag immigration reform, hashtag help.

Speaker 17 (01:07:06):
I'm trapped in a hashtag factory.

Speaker 35 (01:07:07):
And I can't get out the chat Benson show that time.

Speaker 36 (01:07:12):
Of the week, we sit out and talk a little
bit at the account of me with every buddy Zach
Abramachie investment officer, Board Capital, friend of the show, sponsor
the show. All right, let's get into it, because of
course it's the big news of the week. When it
comes to the economy, they revised it, and you and
I talk about this all the time when it comes
to jobs, when it comes to anything, they never revise
it in the way where it's like, hey, we thought

(01:07:33):
we only created five jobs, we created twenty million.

Speaker 17 (01:07:36):
Instead it's hey, we created twenty million jobs.

Speaker 36 (01:07:38):
No, we really created five, thank you, of eight hundred
and eighteen thousand jobs.

Speaker 3 (01:07:43):
What the hell does it all mean?

Speaker 37 (01:07:44):
Yeah, So it's something that we've talked about for a while,
and I think it really just comes down to because
it is remarkably consistent. Don't quote me on this, but
I want to say about eighty five percent of the
time jobs numbers come in higher, like, so, about eighty
five percent of the time the revisions are negative, Okay.

Speaker 17 (01:08:05):
So I think that that's probably just a factor of.

Speaker 37 (01:08:09):
Everybody in power as an incentive for that number to
be better. And so basically, I think it's as simple
as the computation or the arithmetic that happens behind the
scenes is just, you know, let's air on the let's
air on.

Speaker 17 (01:08:23):
The positive side. Right. So I don't think it's necessarily
like a conspiracy.

Speaker 37 (01:08:27):
But if you have revisions and you've got a solid process,
you know, statistical analysis will bear out that fifty percent
of the time they should be revisions higher, fifty percent
of the time they should be revisions lower. This one
is a little bit different though, because I think that
you've got so much noise in the economy.

Speaker 17 (01:08:46):
I think you have so much noise in the.

Speaker 37 (01:08:48):
Job market, specifically for all kinds of reasons, right, people
working multiple jobs, you know, the number of leaves, so
people leaving jobs where they're going to go to another job,
you know, so they didn't get laid off, per se.

Speaker 17 (01:09:02):
There's a lot of noise in the numbers. That being said,
when you look.

Speaker 37 (01:09:06):
At how much hype the job side of it has
gotten from this administration, particularly over the last year and
a half, you know, it's one of those things where, look,
I'm never going to insinuate that they're painting the tape
per se, just because you know, I'm not there and
I don't know and I haven't spoken to these people.

Speaker 17 (01:09:25):
But when you think about how much you know, how many.

Speaker 37 (01:09:28):
Times we've heard, well, look at the job creation under
Joe Biden, which always cracks me up. Right, It's like, Okay,
you turned the economy off with the flip of a switch,
you turned it back on, and you pretended that all
of those people that went back to work were new
jobs created.

Speaker 17 (01:09:40):
Like yeah, I mean, give me a break, right, but yeah,
I think it's.

Speaker 37 (01:09:44):
The other thing is there's a lot of noise with
the birth death model, meaning you get real employment data,
but a lot of the data that they're giving us
is an extrapolation using an algorithm off of the limited
data they have, right, and that algorithm is built off
of averages and and things like that over the over
the past, and so it really doesn't surprise me. But

(01:10:06):
when you see the amount, I mean, you downward to
revise almost a million jobs out of the deal, and
I think, I think it goes to show what you
and I have been talking about, which is this is
not you know, you know, I think you and I've
been talking about this for the last two years, and
I've said.

Speaker 17 (01:10:23):
It multiple times. This is not a booming economy. This
is an economy.

Speaker 37 (01:10:27):
Driven by insanely on any measure you look at it,
insanely high deficits. Right, only one other time in history
do we have deficits the size of percentage of this
entire size.

Speaker 17 (01:10:38):
Of the economy.

Speaker 37 (01:10:39):
So when people sit there and go Bidenomics is working,
and you're like, you know that, that's like the equivalent
of saying someone's really financially successful because they've racked up
a million and a half dollars on their Amax, right, Like, yeah,
of course it buys nice stuff.

Speaker 17 (01:10:51):
Now, now how do you pay for it?

Speaker 4 (01:10:52):
Right?

Speaker 37 (01:10:53):
So, you know, I think it's just a I think
there's a lot of noise going on, a lot of
crazy ins and outs, a lot of one offs in
this economy.

Speaker 17 (01:11:00):
And then you know, I think you've got an.

Speaker 37 (01:11:02):
Administration that had every incentive to try to juice that
number in any way possible.

Speaker 17 (01:11:06):
And I think you're starting to see reality.

Speaker 36 (01:11:08):
Sitting talking is zact Abram Chievestment Officer Board Capital Uh
you look, okay?

Speaker 3 (01:11:13):
The job support.

Speaker 36 (01:11:14):
So that being said, does this make the FED say,
oh we got to be a little bit more progressive
here and maybe go half?

Speaker 3 (01:11:21):
Does it?

Speaker 17 (01:11:22):
Are they going to be slow and steady?

Speaker 3 (01:11:24):
And maybe do you know a quarter?

Speaker 37 (01:11:26):
I think that if you look at the underlying data. Okay,
So putting all things aside, it's a good thought experiment.
A buddy of mine sent me their day's like, well,
what would you do if you were in your own
pala seat? And I said, and I go, well, I
wouldn't have got us here in the first place. And
he goes, well, that's not the question, right, if you
were in j powl seat right now, what would you do?

Speaker 4 (01:11:43):
So?

Speaker 37 (01:11:43):
I think twenty five basis point cut makes sense. And
then but here's the end of the you know, at
the end of the day, what you want to do
is you want to look at the future the rates
forward markets, right, the rate futures markets. And the reason
I say that is because out of the last twenty
five years, only once in twenty five years, how's the
FED made a rate decision that was not priced in

(01:12:06):
by the rates futures markets.

Speaker 2 (01:12:08):
Previously at Chad Benson Show, it's your ax in Twitter,
tweet at us your text three two three, five three eight,
twenty four twenty three right here in the Chad Benson Show, Zach.

Speaker 36 (01:12:20):
Abrahm, Chiefvestment Officer, Board Capital, if you want to reach
out to you, they want to get a free risk
review chat with you.

Speaker 3 (01:12:24):
What do they do?

Speaker 17 (01:12:25):
Yeah, so pretty easy.

Speaker 37 (01:12:26):
You can give us call at eight sixty six seven
seven nine risk. You can go to Bororcapitalmanagement dot com.
You can just google Know your Risk radio podcast. We're
doing our daily dots.

Speaker 17 (01:12:35):
So yeah, all that. Just Know your Risk radio podcasts,
bull or Capital Management. We're not too tough to find.

Speaker 3 (01:12:39):
Right on, brother, appreciate you.

Speaker 17 (01:12:41):
You have a good one, all right, boys, thanks for
having me. It's fun as always.

Speaker 3 (01:12:44):
Zach Abraham, chief investment officer right there Pullwork Capital Management.
You can check him out at Know Your Risk Radio
dot com. That's Know You Risk Radio dot com. Investment
advisory services offer through check Financial LC and SEC Registered
Investment Advisor. Three two three, five, three eight, twenty four
twenty three. Chad Benson Show is your Twitter chat Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:13:03):
This is the Chad Benson Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent Life.

Speaker 15 (01:13:33):
This is Chad Benson.

Speaker 3 (01:13:34):
The DNC is behind us.

Speaker 2 (01:13:37):
Now in front of us is the race to the
end November fifth, not the end of the world, just
the end of this long election season that is now
very truncated. Joining us now is Jim Kennedy Kennedys INT
of Public Policy Research. Give us a snapshot of what
we saw this week, and Jim, can I just say, brother, vibes, baby,
It's all about vibes.

Speaker 38 (01:13:58):
Oh brother, it is all a vibes. And by the way,
don't forget this is the most important election ever. According
to Kamala Harris, as of last night.

Speaker 2 (01:14:06):
Have you ever you and I are about the same
age when's the last time you had both presidential canons go?

Speaker 3 (01:14:12):
You know, a guy's motor, don't vote. This one's not
that important. Never, they're always the most important.

Speaker 38 (01:14:17):
Yeah, I'm not sure. Maybe McKinley, but I'm not sure.
A little bit, a little bit before my time, but yeah, no, absolutely,
it's the most important for them because they want your vote,
and that's obviously what it is. Is most important for Donald
Trump because more than likely it's the last time he'll
probably run in an election, and it's most important for
Kamala Harris because she doesn't do well, she probably won't

(01:14:38):
get a chance to run again. So for that aspect,
they are probably being truthful in that point. But to
the average American, I believe Mark Halprin was saying today
that he just cringes every time they say that, because,
of course, to the candidate it is the most important
election because it's the one right in front of them
right now.

Speaker 2 (01:14:55):
Crazy. Uh So let's start first with the week. We
can talk about Comlin. We'll get to all that stuff
in a minute. But the reality was two months ago
this was going to be a essentially a morgue, and

(01:15:15):
that I mean, they knew they could they could pretend
it was going to be anything other than a morgue,
basically a celebration of life, if you will, or the
life of a president that won't be anymore.

Speaker 3 (01:15:28):
And then the vibes came.

Speaker 2 (01:15:29):
He dropped out, everybody got behind somebody who's still yet
to get a vote, by the way, never made it
to Iowa. And this week, the vibes, whatever you want
to call it, there was momentum in that building.

Speaker 38 (01:15:41):
No, absolutely, and don't forget ninety days ago. If you
thought the Kamala Harris would have been the vice excuse me,
the presidential nominee, that would have been ridiculous. And there
were questions if she would have been the vice presidential
nominee at this convention if Joe Biden was still running,
because they had to change something and they couldn't change
Joe apparently, so maybe you had to find another vice

(01:16:02):
president that would excite people to bring them out, because
Joe wasn't going to bring them out to vote. And yes,
you are correct, it was going to be a mortgage,
was going to be a funeral procession. And they knew
they were going to lose because as much as as
much as Donald Trump can shoot himself in the foot.
Joe Biden was simply not competent to be president, and

(01:16:23):
there was no way that people were going to vote
for him, and enough numbers to get him elected. So, yes,
this is why there are vibes and there are joy
going on at this convention.

Speaker 4 (01:16:32):
Was because of that.

Speaker 38 (01:16:33):
They have a new candidate, even if it's someone who
ninety days ago they would have laughed at us being
the presidential nominee.

Speaker 4 (01:16:40):
It is different.

Speaker 38 (01:16:41):
Different is better, and we'll go with different and we
will try to ride this thing to the election and
possibly into the presidency because this is such a wacky
setup with such a short time and her ability to
dodge every question so far from any media member, and
the media's willingness to basically kind of put her up

(01:17:01):
there without really asking any tough questions. So far, she's
gonna have to go through a debate, which you'll probably
talk about, but outside of that, yeah, being basically right,
it's we are running on vibes and the Democrats seem
to have dodged quite a bit of a bullet by
getting Joe to stepped down by however means necessary if
you ask Nancy Pelosi.

Speaker 3 (01:17:20):
Yeah, no, doubt.

Speaker 2 (01:17:20):
Talking to Jim Kennedy Kennedy Institute at Public Policy Research,
you know, you said something that she's dodged the questions.
I don't feel she's dodged any questions because I don't
feel the media, I think, and I'm talking about the
traditional media, the New York Times, you know.

Speaker 3 (01:17:38):
People like that. They're not interested.

Speaker 2 (01:17:40):
They feel like they're part of the resistance, and they're
not interested in upsetting the apple cart right now if
they don't have to. And if I'm a lawyer, right like,
how many times have you heard this, Jim, you know
this forever today. Never let your client get on the
stand unless it's absolutely necessary.

Speaker 3 (01:17:56):
It's the same thing here. They're not pushing hard enough,
in my opinion, to.

Speaker 2 (01:18:01):
Get her to answer questions because they're not curious enough
because the whole goal is let's just get rid of Donald.

Speaker 28 (01:18:09):
No.

Speaker 4 (01:18:09):
Absolutely, You're absolutely right.

Speaker 38 (01:18:10):
They are the resist and that's I mean, that's a
larger problem we have in America is that, as I
tag many posts on x formerly known as Twitter, with
the hashtag, journalism is dead because no one wants to
do journalism anymore.

Speaker 4 (01:18:24):
Especially on the left. When it comes to this type
of stuff.

Speaker 38 (01:18:26):
They just simply want to be there, you know why,
because they want the next gig on MSNBC or CNN
or whatever network it is, to be the next studio analyst,
to basically move up from being a newspaper reporter. And
that's why they don't want to upset the appook cart,
like you said, because they don't want to be the
person known as it asked a tough question that could.

Speaker 4 (01:18:44):
Have caused Kamala Harris a problem and not.

Speaker 38 (01:18:46):
Get that gig on MSNBC or CNN of the future
after they've written two or three books. And that's exactly
what it is. That everyone's looking for their own self
interest going forward as a journalist. And I mean there
are people out there practicing journalism. I shouldn't say that
as a complete blanket state, and I try to follow
some of them on Twitter and stuff, but so on
and so forth. It's pretty much it is dead for

(01:19:07):
what it has been in the past. The inquisitiveness of
this isn't out there, and I don't know how long
it's going to last because we are in such a
short cycle. I mean, I'm assuming they can't ask Kamala
at the debate, what's your spirit animal while asking Donald
Trump how he defends the January sixth rioters. I'm assume
they're going to be somewhat balanced, because even the CNN
in the scene with Biden where he bombed was somewhat

(01:19:30):
balanced and it was fair. A lot of the Democrats
were irate because it.

Speaker 2 (01:19:33):
Was Yeah, because even Trump said last week, no, Dana
Bash and Jake tappertry to be fine. And let me
ask you this, Jim talking to Jim Kennedy and Kennedy
Insto to the Public Policy Research. We look back at this
the week of vibes. I think September tenth, the debate
is the most important date outside of a black Swan event,
that it's going to take place, because if she does well,

(01:19:55):
she's never going to do another one. If she does well,
she's going to feel there's no need to And this
may be the only chance for Trump to put her
in a position where the media is going to have
to absolutely be forced to press her on things.

Speaker 4 (01:20:11):
Yeah.

Speaker 38 (01:20:11):
Absolutely, this is about That's about the only thing that's
going to change it outside of some sort of a
monumental gaff on the campaign trail. This is this is
the only chance where they're where the media is going
to be outside of this to the point to where
they can't control it. If she says something stupid or
something silly, or you know, talks about like like President
Ford did about Poland not being a communist country or something. Yeah,

(01:20:34):
most definitely this is something that will derail her. But
outside of that, yeah, I agree, I think that's out.
Outside of a black swan of app that's pretty much
all that that there is right now. Unfortunately, Trump's kind
of in a box right now. There's really not much
he can do. He's a known quantity. Basically, either you
hate Trump or you don't hate Trump, and there's not
a lot that's going to change that short of you know,

(01:20:55):
I don't know, maybe another assassination. It's hap unfortunately, something
like that. But basically, you know, we are where we are.
As far as the opinions, it comes down to a
small number of people in a number of swing states.
They're going to determine who's going to be the president.
But you have a hard time changing a lot of
views on Trump right now.

Speaker 4 (01:21:12):
So it's basically Kamala is to lose as long as.

Speaker 38 (01:21:14):
She doesn't you know, created more gaffs or people decided
the burden of having Kamala Harris they need to be
unburdened from so good.

Speaker 2 (01:21:22):
Chim Kennedy, Kennedy Institute of Policy Research. You look out there, brother,
and if you are the Republicans, what do you do
from here on out? They've destroyed JD Vance, which is
much crap, and they've elevated Tim Walls to this amazingness
like he is this and I will say this, I
watched that the other night. I was extremely touched by
his son, the fact that so many influencers on the

(01:21:44):
right came out and destroyed his son, which was just
asinine and stupid.

Speaker 3 (01:21:48):
I think he's probably a great father.

Speaker 2 (01:21:49):
And everybody I've talked to this met him said he's
one of the most genuine human beings you will ever met.

Speaker 3 (01:21:54):
But he but he seems like communism.

Speaker 2 (01:21:57):
How do the Republicans and in with the Republics, how
do they break through that to get the word out
that look, these people, they got smiles on their faces,
but as they're doing that, they're doing things that are
gonna mess with our country, like you can't believe.

Speaker 38 (01:22:14):
Yeah, I think the one thing in Chad, you know
you've been in you were in California a long time
as I've been, and you know Kamala Harris's record, and
you've lived through Kamala Harris's record, though not in the
same area, in the same state as attorney general. I
think that needs to be brought to the forefront is
what she did as a liberal San Francisco DA and
what she did as a even more liberal attorney general

(01:22:35):
in California, and how she's basically, in my words, become
a political gumby by basically bending yourself.

Speaker 4 (01:22:41):
To the political conditions of the time to advance her career.
Now Trump did that yesterday.

Speaker 38 (01:22:46):
He had a victim from one of There was a
program that kam Alla put together in San Francisco as
DA believe, where she would basically use job training as
a way out of people that had committed semi violent
felonies to basically prevent them from allowed them to stay
out of jail. And there was one guy who did
that who really wasn't eligible for it, who went through

(01:23:06):
it and then dropped out of it, and then wound
up almost murdering a woman who basically they robbed her
and they drove off and she was hanging on the
car and they swung the car and they threw off
the car and she almost died from a brain injury.
They had her on Trump had her on the campaign Trailio,
and I think there's more cases like that that they
need to bring up. They need to bring up with
Kamala's record is she's not this middle of the road

(01:23:28):
joyous person, you know from her time in California, and
I think they really need that. There's a lot of
things out there. If you google, you know San Francisco
artsdias as victims. She was working with the clergy victims
in San Francisco for quite a while until all of
a sudden she just kind of dropped them and no
longer pushed for prosecution of the of the archdiocese and

(01:23:49):
the priests that were involved in the clergy abuse up there.
For thirty forty years. It has been throughout all the
many of the archdioceses in America, and there's lots of
questions of why she dropped that. Then all of a sudden,
she was endorsed by the Arts diasis when she, I believe,
when she ran for Attorney General of California. So there's
lots of questions, a lots of her past work up
there that needs to be exposed to basically show this

(01:24:09):
is really what Kamala Harris is, not just this joyous,
happy person who's going to fix everything even though she's
been the vice president for three year.

Speaker 3 (01:24:17):
Your gut right now, if you had to say today,
not going forward today, who do you think wins today?

Speaker 38 (01:24:23):
Based on the momentum and where we are, I would
say Kamala Harris is probably going to be the next president.
There's still whatever it is seventy four days or whatever
to change this, but as of right now, I always
say Kamala Harris has got everything going for She's riding
the waves. She's going to probab another week or two
of pete Kamala.

Speaker 3 (01:24:40):
She's got mine, man.

Speaker 38 (01:24:41):
She has vibes. Maerica loves vibes. You know, when we
come back from Labor Day, everything kind of changes. Kids
go back to school, parents start, you know, kind of
hunking down for the holidays towards you know, and start
focusing towards the end of the year. People start realizing
what happened to the year. It's already nine months gone,
and you know, it changes a lot of things, and
we're going to go from a summertime into a winter
before the election in early November. But right now I

(01:25:04):
think it's Kamala Harris's race to lose Jim Kennedy.

Speaker 2 (01:25:07):
Kennedy into the public policy research. Always great to have
you on, brother, I appreciate it. We'll talk to you soon.

Speaker 3 (01:25:11):
Thanks, Chad, appreciate Jim coming on right there. Raycon best here,
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These things start at under one hundred dollars, and I'm
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They are absolutely the most incredible thing. I swear by
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Speaker 3 (01:26:15):
Watch trending Chad Benson.

Speaker 15 (01:26:17):
Joe, you're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 3 (01:26:30):
Now it's time to find out what's trending.

Speaker 39 (01:26:33):
What's trending James Dean, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Sera,

(01:26:55):
what traping?

Speaker 4 (01:26:59):
Sight that?

Speaker 3 (01:26:59):
What's turning the old interwebs on this Friday? Start with the.

Speaker 2 (01:27:04):
Uh Jennifer Garner, Kamala Harris, Gaza Pink at the DNC,
Tim Walls, Russia, Ukraine war Beyonce did not show up
last night.

Speaker 4 (01:27:25):
At all.

Speaker 3 (01:27:27):
Some people thought it's gonna be George W. Bush, was
gonna be who was it gonna be? T Swift? Now
the celebrity was VP Harris. That's what they said.

Speaker 2 (01:27:42):
Head over to Twitter. Valorans number one trending thing you're like,
what the hell is that?

Speaker 3 (01:27:46):
It's a video game team, That's what it is. It
shows you how many people are paying attention.

Speaker 2 (01:27:56):
Friday Feeling, Harris, Aaron Oprah, and Colter.

Speaker 3 (01:28:02):
We'll get to that in a second. Bill Clinton, Dinesh
de SUSA, The Chicks, Adam Kinsinger, t Swift, Pink, Leon Panetta,
George Bush, x mail what's that?

Speaker 2 (01:28:20):
That is what Elon may be launching next x mail
instead of Gmail?

Speaker 3 (01:28:26):
Would you do x mail? I don't know. Is it good?

Speaker 2 (01:28:28):
We'll find out the more trendy thing on Google and
Coulter Kamala Harris, Adam Kinsinger, Central Park five, Beyonce, Kerry Washington,
Kamala Speech, Leon Panetta, Pink, Gabby Gifferts, Elizabeth Warren.

Speaker 3 (01:28:46):
All trending on Google.

Speaker 2 (01:28:54):
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three
at Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 3 (01:28:58):
Is your Twitter tweet a US text?

Speaker 2 (01:29:00):
The program right here on The Chad Benton Show.

Speaker 3 (01:29:09):
The speech last night? What'd you make of the speech?

Speaker 4 (01:29:12):
Chad?

Speaker 2 (01:29:12):
It was there, It was you know, she did everything
she had to do. We've been talking about don't flub
your lines.

Speaker 3 (01:29:21):
She didn't. She came out and she was solid wasn't It.

Speaker 2 (01:29:25):
Was everything you needed it to be if you're the Democrats,
because remember.

Speaker 3 (01:29:32):
This is a ViBe's election.

Speaker 2 (01:29:34):
And Coulter tweeted out something as well as several other
people about Gus Walls, and to be honest with you,
I find it abhorrent if Gus Walls.

Speaker 3 (01:29:45):
You know who it is. That's the son of Tim Walls.

Speaker 2 (01:29:47):
It's on the spectrum who's super excited the other night
about his dad. It was a sweet moment, and many
ass hats out there ran with something. It's a seventeen
year old on the spectrum crying because his dad's up
there and he was so freaking excited, and it was
an absolute sweet moment at a time when we tear

(01:30:09):
each other's heads off, and the idiot's ass hats out
there who just out it's tampon Tim's kid and dada,
you guys are a bunch.

Speaker 3 (01:30:17):
Of dumb asses, you really are. I was just I
just you know. She deleted the tweet, but you know
how it is.

Speaker 2 (01:30:26):
They didn't go anywhere, and even the likes of hardcore
Trump's supporters met Walsh's of the world, and you know,
the Shapiros and many others fired back at a lot
of people saying, what the hell are you doing? Because
in today's world, being louder, more angry and divisive, get

(01:30:48):
your clicks and likes and people live on those as
if they're currency.

Speaker 3 (01:30:52):
You're missing this show. Grab the podcast. It is the
Chad Benson shoe.

Speaker 32 (01:30:58):
The Chad Benson shoe.

Speaker 1 (01:31:18):
Independent Thoughts, Independent life. This is Chad Benson.

Speaker 40 (01:31:24):
Lasting from the German warship brown Schweg this week cruising
along the River Thames in London the Imperial March Darth
Vader's theme in the Star Wars films. A bystanders phone
video of it went viral. The German Navy says the
ship commander is free to choose any tunes, no deeper
message God. The ship also blared London calling the nineteen

(01:31:46):
seventy nine hit from British rock band The Clash, drawn
from the BBC in World War Two. The warship's been
on a training mission.

Speaker 3 (01:31:53):
It was hilarious too because obviously I don't know if
you guys are wear this. The British and the Germans
have some history.

Speaker 2 (01:32:01):
And they were blairing that and that guy's like, uh,
I used to live on the Thames. It was so cool,
a little braggadocious there. So I'll let you guys know
that sounds solid for all the talk of politics, the
wackiness and craziness of the vibes week, look back at
some of the stories and maybe we missed and some
of the stories we should have paid attention to if
you guys weren't paying attention because you were vibing all week.

Speaker 3 (01:32:25):
We've got a new streaming competitor.

Speaker 2 (01:32:28):
And I will tell you this, out of all of
the streaming services out there, and there's plenty of them,
this one makes the best food.

Speaker 4 (01:32:38):
That's reportedly going to start by the end of the year.

Speaker 3 (01:32:39):
Hey, you know a lot of people like Chick fil A.

Speaker 41 (01:32:42):
I don't know how much they're gonna like the streaming service.
The Burgens is still going to be out chicken biscuits.
I don't know why chicken biscuits are on my mind
right now, Heda. But let's talk about this new report
from Deadline that is talking about Chick fil A streaming
service and it could launch as soon as the end
of this year. So we're talking about it now.

Speaker 4 (01:33:00):
Wow, But it.

Speaker 41 (01:33:00):
Could be a reality by twenty twenty five.

Speaker 4 (01:33:04):
By the end of this year. Wow, that's crazy, all right.

Speaker 41 (01:33:06):
So the channel reportedly include family friendly shows or reality
shows like you mentioned. It may also include license or
made license and acquire existing shows. Chick fil A, though,
wouldn't be alone here now, joining the likes of Lyft
or Airbnb is non entertainment companies that have crossed over
into you know, other platforms.

Speaker 2 (01:33:23):
Again Airbnb, of all of the streaming services, the best
one for a place to stay, Airbnb. Lift is the
best one in the streaming services for you know, if
I was Lyft, I wouldn't offer the streaming services to
people and a pay. I would make sure that everybody

(01:33:44):
has them in their cars, just like when you go
to the gas station and you can you know, they
have gas station TV and if you've got a lift app,
you can watch it. And just turned the entire lift
thing into taxicab confessions.

Speaker 41 (01:34:00):
You and people are asking why why streaming this graphic?
You know, offer some explanation. According to Fords, ninety nine
percent of US households payper at least one or more
streaming services.

Speaker 3 (01:34:11):
That's a lot of opportunity, a.

Speaker 4 (01:34:12):
Lot of money.

Speaker 41 (01:34:13):
Chick fil A apparently wants a piece of the pie,
considering Netflix you mentioned this has nearly two hundred and
seventy million customers, Amazon Prime more than two hundred million,
Disney Plus more than one hundred and fifty million, and
they launched a twenty nineteen. So there's a huge market
for streaming, a lot of money, a lot of opportunity.

Speaker 3 (01:34:30):
We reached out had a two Chick fil A.

Speaker 41 (01:34:32):
Really, how is this going to work?

Speaker 4 (01:34:35):
There are reports by.

Speaker 41 (01:34:36):
The end of this year are they going to be
streaming on Sundays? We know this place is going to
be closed on Sundays.

Speaker 3 (01:34:42):
That's a great question. Are they going to be streaming
on Sundays? Are they gonna I'm curious to.

Speaker 2 (01:34:47):
Find out how they do their entertainment thing are they
going to do? Is it gonna like are you just
gonna do reality shows? Have you follow your people around?
Turn them into many stars? Are you going to I mean,
is it's a curious thing that you'd want to do that?
But I think they look around and they see where

(01:35:09):
the world is the Netflix, the wokeness, the craziness, and say,
maybe there's an opportunity here to do something with family values.
But it's Chick fil A. If you buy the streaming service,
would you do this if you bought the streaming service

(01:35:30):
and they gave you a free meal, like two free
meals a month. I think people go, I sign up
for that every day. I don't care what they're doing.
I love that chicken. I love that chicken.

Speaker 33 (01:35:43):
I do.

Speaker 3 (01:35:45):
I love that chicken. It is so good. Sound salad
where we.

Speaker 2 (01:35:53):
Talk about some stories that we should be talking about,
but we weren't because you know, this week it was crazy.

Speaker 4 (01:35:59):
A lot.

Speaker 3 (01:36:00):
There was a lot of how we'd like to call vibes.

Speaker 2 (01:36:05):
Now you know about the revision in the jobs, well,
Chairman pal breaking news just came out.

Speaker 21 (01:36:11):
The time has come for policy to adjust. The direction
of travel is clear, and the timing and pace of
rate cuts will depend on incoming data, the evolving outlook
and the balance of risks.

Speaker 3 (01:36:24):
Oh, he is going to lower rates.

Speaker 2 (01:36:26):
Now, it's not telling everybody why he's lowering rates as
far I mean, how far he's lowering them. We just
you know, spoke earlier with our buddies. Zat Gabram, chief
investment officer. He believes a quarter, he believes it's already
built in based on you know, well, people shorting the bonds,
the whole nine yards could he do more the paw possibility,
but I have a feeling because he's very risk adverse,

(01:36:46):
it's going to be a quarter.

Speaker 21 (01:36:47):
The labor market is no longer overheated, and conditions are
now less tight than those that prevailed before the pandemic.
Supply constraints have normalized, and the balance of risks to
our two mandates.

Speaker 3 (01:37:01):
He is so boring.

Speaker 2 (01:37:02):
So there you go, going to cut some rates, which
is good news, which is very good news.

Speaker 3 (01:37:08):
Speaking of other good news, Harley Davidson no longer DII.

Speaker 42 (01:37:11):
This is a pretty stunning moment for Harley Davidson where
bikers are saying, this is not the brand that we've
been devoted to for half a century or more.

Speaker 15 (01:37:20):
What happens here with Harley.

Speaker 43 (01:37:21):
Davidson, Well, if you have to say to your customers,
what we're going to focus on is motorcycle, Okay, that
seems like a bad turn. You've made a bad turn
if you have to remind them of that. And I
think that's what a lot of these companies do. They
get so caught up. In this case, there's a German
born CEO who was the head of Puma and did'll
turn around there to his credit, who is now the

(01:37:41):
head of this one and twenty year old brand about
America and open roads and motorcycles. And when he calls
himself in a controversial clip I believe in twenty twenty
the Taliban of sustainability, meaning he's going to be as
extreme as possible in his environmental edicts for this company.

(01:38:02):
It makes people think like, maybe he's not so into
the customer base that he's serving, maybe he doesn't understand
who he's selling motorcycles to, and maybe he's not that
interested in selling motorcycle.

Speaker 2 (01:38:14):
Well, they're getting rid of their DEI and they've scrapped
the DEI, and that guy was is a bit of
a whack adodal. He did really well with Puma and
some other stuff, but he has decided now this isn't
going to work, which I think is a very smart thing.

Speaker 42 (01:38:31):
By the way, Harley Davis is saying, since we're not
doing DEI.

Speaker 2 (01:38:34):
We stopped in April.

Speaker 42 (01:38:35):
But this all goes back to a document they put
out in twenty twenty two where they said they were
going to implement things like sponsored trainings and workshops focused
on DEI. Nearly fifteen hundred employees participated in an Inclusion
in Belonging workshop and employees participated in a summit held
by quote white men as full diversity.

Speaker 2 (01:38:57):
Here's the DEI you should have. You walk in, you
look at all your employees and go, don't be ass hats.
Treat everybody kind, be nice to each other, regardless of
the color of their skin, who they worship, who they
don't worship, who they love, who they don't love. There
you go, that's it. That's like that. That's put that down,

(01:39:24):
Write that down. There's your training. There is your training.

Speaker 3 (01:39:31):
Get rid of it.

Speaker 2 (01:39:32):
So you've had was it tractor supply? They got rid
of their DEI and John Deere.

Speaker 3 (01:39:39):
And the reason is simple.

Speaker 2 (01:39:41):
Yes people complain, yes people pressured, but also so many
of these things. First of all, understand this, this is
not about training somebody to be more inclusive. This isn't there.
These are covering your ass situations. So if something goes
wrong and somebody sues, you could say, we put them

(01:40:02):
through all this stuff and they still did it. We've
followed all the mandates that are put out there, we
bet the knee and blah blah.

Speaker 3 (01:40:09):
That's what these things are for. They're not.

Speaker 2 (01:40:13):
To become more inclusive. And better in any of that stuff.
It's a cya yourself.

Speaker 3 (01:40:23):
Ohh oh, that's a that's interesting. Yes, that's it.

Speaker 2 (01:40:28):
That's why they give you the training for sexual harassments.
You do all of these things so if something happens,
you could go We've done all of this stuff.

Speaker 3 (01:40:37):
We did the work, We did the work, and it
still didn't matter. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four,
twenty three at Chad Benson shows your Twitter tweet at
his text the program. We were trying so hard and
ti By the way, it's such a joke because it

(01:41:01):
is about punishing. It is about nonsense, and it is
about segregating. It is not about really trying to have
an understanding of each other.

Speaker 4 (01:41:13):
That's what it is.

Speaker 3 (01:41:14):
Such a joke. It is.

Speaker 2 (01:41:18):
Oh lord, I'm gonna wrap it up straight ahead and
got finally Friday sounds.

Speaker 3 (01:41:21):
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Speaker 3 (01:42:32):
It's Chad Benson show.

Speaker 15 (01:42:42):
Frunning with Scissors sounds great compared to this.

Speaker 3 (01:42:45):
See it is Friday. It's Friday, so you know what
that means? Oh yeah, Finally, Friday sounds.

Speaker 16 (01:42:54):
We hear by call the in person portion of the
forty ninth quad any Old Democratic.

Speaker 23 (01:43:01):
National Convention to order to spend the honor of my lifetime.

Speaker 4 (01:43:05):
The servers are present.

Speaker 11 (01:43:06):
I love the job, but I love my country War
the Old Lions, Last War.

Speaker 12 (01:43:11):
I think the Democrats want people to vote for her
based on a vibe.

Speaker 3 (01:43:16):
Outside of the convention.

Speaker 24 (01:43:18):
Their planned parent and is offering free abortions, free best second.

Speaker 10 (01:43:22):
Yeah, this is the party of abortion.

Speaker 18 (01:43:24):
Yes, politics at its worst can be ugly.

Speaker 31 (01:43:32):
Again, they are trying to put forward male figures who
can speak to men out there who might not be
the sort of testosterone leaden gun toting kind of guy.

Speaker 3 (01:43:55):
I did shoot myself a leg when I was falling backwards.

Speaker 20 (01:43:57):
Fine, look, I think the reality is holding the media
accountable for their own lives is a necessary part of
running a campaign.

Speaker 21 (01:44:17):
The word that everybody is using to describe tonight as
bitter asweet.

Speaker 4 (01:44:20):
It's just better that Trump is over it.

Speaker 3 (01:44:22):
He does not want to be the Republican nominee no more.

Speaker 22 (01:44:27):
It's the honor of my life to accept your nomination
for vice president of the United States.

Speaker 17 (01:44:34):
And the reason went long is because of all the rockets.

Speaker 4 (01:44:36):
Applause, what what the what's wrong with you're telling me?
Women in Jodre we murder, what is this?

Speaker 38 (01:44:44):
I'm free.

Speaker 23 (01:44:56):
They spend three hundred million dollars on presidential campaigns. Twenty
four years later, you know what, they're expected to spend
ten billion.

Speaker 3 (01:45:03):
Quit whining about her.

Speaker 9 (01:45:04):
The campaign is not going to win. Talking about crowd sizes.

Speaker 24 (01:45:07):
The path that led me here in recent weeks was
no doubt unexpected. But I'm no stranger to unlikely journeys
on behalf of everyone whose story could only be written
in the greatest nation on earth.

Speaker 5 (01:45:25):
I accept your nomination.

Speaker 43 (01:45:28):
To be president in the United States of America of America.

Speaker 2 (01:45:37):
So the DNC in the books over done, dusted.

Speaker 3 (01:45:42):
It is time to get serious. It is time to
get serious now for everybody.

Speaker 2 (01:45:51):
But you can have a week to get ready for that,
which is good because we have the sprint will begin
not this coming up Tuesday, but the following Tuesday because
Labor Day boom and then it's on.

Speaker 3 (01:46:07):
That's when it begins.

Speaker 2 (01:46:10):
So Kamala, she accepted last night, as you just heard
right there, to be the nominee for the Democrats in
this upcoming election.

Speaker 3 (01:46:19):
At the DNC, which brings us to this.

Speaker 21 (01:46:21):
And then I go and spoil it all by saying
something stupid.

Speaker 3 (01:46:25):
It will take stupid pills this morning.

Speaker 2 (01:46:27):
It's the honest ones you want to watch out for,
because you can never predict.

Speaker 17 (01:46:31):
They're gonna do something incredibly stupid.

Speaker 3 (01:46:34):
Now you're the fat, stupid one with the big mouth.

Speaker 15 (01:46:37):
Is stupid little as.

Speaker 3 (01:46:40):
You should never underestimate the predictability of stupiditing.

Speaker 5 (01:46:45):
Now it's time for.

Speaker 17 (01:46:49):
Stupid information.

Speaker 2 (01:46:53):
Kamala is now, she's in the driver's seat. She is
the candidate Hillary in twenty sixteen. Oh she was the first.
She was not the first woman to run for president
the United States. There have been several that their hats
win in the ring, if you will. But the first woman,

(01:47:15):
many people believe that ran for president and if you
ask them and historians was Victoria Woodhell. She was the
first woman to formally run for president. She announce her
candidacy in a letter to the New York Herald. Was
nominated by the National Convention of Equal Rights Party in
eighteen seventy two. Frederick Douglass, by the way, was nominated
for vice president by the Convention, but he took no

(01:47:37):
part in Woodhull's campaign.

Speaker 3 (01:47:39):
Here's the issue. She was only thirty three at the time.

Speaker 2 (01:47:41):
He had to be thirty five, and she wouldn't have
been thirty five until months after the election. But many
people credit her being the first woman to run for
president of the United States. She was an interesting woman.
She was a stockbroker, she was the leader of the
Suffer movement. She she did, She was a newspaper editor.

(01:48:04):
She'd been married three times, which in that day you
don't do.

Speaker 31 (01:48:09):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:48:09):
She had strong views on a portion that were very interesting,
that no woman should ever want an unwished for child.
And at the same time she felt that the mini
you were pregnant, essentially that you had that baby and
it the baby life and rights had began because it

(01:48:34):
was not its will to come into this world.

Speaker 3 (01:48:38):
Very interesting woman back in the day. Make a movie
about that.

Speaker 2 (01:48:41):
Huckets three, two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four, twenty
three at Chad Benson's show, to Twitter, your Instagram, all
of the other things right here on the Chad Benson Show.
So the DNC is now behind us, the RNC is
behind us. It is now now a sprint and a

(01:49:01):
truncated race. This will be how do the Republicans go
about making sure everybody understands when they talk about bringing
down inflation, when they talk about the wars, they talk
about all of these things that she was a part
of this administration.

Speaker 3 (01:49:17):
That is going to be the big issue for.

Speaker 2 (01:49:20):
The Republicans moving forward, in particular for Trump staying on
message and for the Democrats.

Speaker 3 (01:49:25):
How long can the vibes last? We shall see three two, three, five,
twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show. To Twitter,
your Instagram. Do you guys have a blessed rest of
your day and weekend. We'll do it again on Monday
as always, Night Night Jack.

Speaker 15 (01:49:39):
This is the Chad Benson Show.
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