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April 16, 2025 110 mins
Maryland senator says he will travel to El Salvador on Wednesday to push for Kilmar Abrego Garcia's release. Woke Wednesday. Harvard is fighting the White House harder than it ever fought antisemitism. Jason Whitlock talks about the devaluing of fathers. Thrifting due to high prices. 
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Episode Transcript

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

Speaker 2 (00:13):
It's another day of constitutional crisis in the US.

Speaker 3 (00:21):
Shame you guys feel like there's a constitutional crisis.

Speaker 2 (00:24):
You're like, I don't even know what you're talking about exactly,
but there is a divisive issue and person when it
comes to immigration that the Democrats have decided this is
the hill we want to die on, and this is
the guy we want.

Speaker 3 (00:40):
To do it with.

Speaker 2 (00:43):
And it is hilarious. You don't know what I'm talking about,
mister Garcia.

Speaker 4 (00:47):
The deportation of a Brago Garcia from Maryland to a
notorious L Salvador prison now a flashpoint as the battle
between the federal courts and the Trump administration ramps up.
I judge now considering contempt proceedings, saying the administration has
done nothing to comply with the Supreme Court's order to
facilitate his return from El Salvador. Justice Department lawyer saying

(01:07):
the administration is prepared to facilitate Obrego Garcia's presence in
the United States, but only if he presents at a
port of entry.

Speaker 2 (01:15):
Well, he can't because he's in jail in El Salvador. Luckily,
Democrat Chris Van Holland is from Maryland.

Speaker 3 (01:25):
He's going there. He won, Yes, he is.

Speaker 2 (01:29):
He's he tried to get a meeting with Mukayle and
it didn't happen, so he's like, I gotta go there.

Speaker 5 (01:38):
I saw the comments of President Bukeley, and I look
forward to meeting with him.

Speaker 3 (01:43):
I've requested to meet with him.

Speaker 5 (01:45):
I reached out to the ambassador here to ask to
meet while he's here. But I've also made clear if
we can't meet here, I do intend to go to
El Salvador to discuss the release of this individual who
is illegally detained, a Maryland man who's the father of
three in a notorious prison in El Salvador. And I

(02:05):
believe the President of Al Salvador will recognize why it's
important to allow him to return to the United States
of America, because it is. It is absolutely unjust and
illegal to have this maryland Er detained one more day
in a notorious prison in Al Salvador.

Speaker 2 (02:30):
You were delusional. You were delusional. Look, the bigger conversation,
the conversation should be had, is about due process. I
say it over and over again. We could sit here
all day, but this is the place that you want
to lay it down. This is the place, all right.

(02:52):
I'm gonna remind you guys, and you guys know this.
He is an El Salvadorian citizen that was in this
country while there was a deportation order. One of the
things for deportation, his order was not to deport him
to L. Salvador, so you'd have to find some place
that would take him.

Speaker 3 (03:13):
But he's an L.

Speaker 2 (03:17):
Salvadorian citizen. He's in his country. He's not a Marylander,
but he wasn't born and raised in Maryland. He's not
a Green card holder or a naturalized citizen. You continue
to fight the dumb fight, because that's what you do.

(03:39):
Oh and Chris van Holland again, Democrat Senator Maryland. He's
going to have to go there and wait to hear
what he has to say, which is even more absurd.

Speaker 5 (03:52):
Of course President Trump could have just said, you know,
bring him home. Of course he could have done that.
But this is an administration that has lied about mister Brago. Garcia, right,
the Vice President of the United States tweeted out that
he had a criminal record.

Speaker 6 (04:06):
That was a lie.

Speaker 1 (04:08):
They're just lying.

Speaker 5 (04:09):
They've gotten caught lining they don't want to admit it,
and they have an obligation to bring him home. But
I will say the President of Al Salvador should not
now take it upon himself to say that he is
detaining him for one more day, because that is kidnapping.
I understand that the Attorney General said that we would

(04:30):
provide a plane to bring him home. So all the
President of Al Salvador has to do now is hand
over and release an innocent man and let him come
home to his family.

Speaker 3 (04:40):
You're an idiot, you are.

Speaker 2 (04:43):
First of all, we don't have any jurisdiction when it
comes to who they're detaining over there. Who's an l
Salvadorian citizen.

Speaker 3 (04:54):
We don't.

Speaker 2 (04:55):
I mean, in theory we'd like to say, yeah, could
we make that phone call?

Speaker 3 (04:59):
Of course we could.

Speaker 2 (05:01):
But now what you've done, and this is again you
guys don't get it. The Democrats, you're martyring people. You're
dying on a hill that you guys, by the way,
that hill that you ignored for so long. That was
one of the reasons you're no longer in power. See

(05:22):
all the absolute ridiculous things that the Biden administration said
and did when it came to immigration over the last
four years. But this thought of, Hey, you've kidnapped somebody
that's a citizen of your country and put him in jail,
then Allin was right. They've not proved anything in court.

(05:44):
They say one thing on the outside, they go to court,
they argue something else. But that being said, continue to
die on this hill, and you're going to continue to
get what you get.

Speaker 7 (05:54):
President Bukelly can say whatever he wants about our Supreme Court.
He's not bound by any of their decisions. But Trump
is The court upheld the order that the government should
get this man back. Now, what they said was no
court can dictate the precise means by which Obergo Garcia
should be brought back. But the order of the court
that this was an illegal act by the government and

(06:17):
that the government must bring this man back stands. And
Trump is in effect defying that court order.

Speaker 2 (06:25):
Now that depends on who you're talking to. And I'm
at you, guys, know you listen to the show. I'm
a due process guy. I want this to get done
the right way. Make it harder on themselves when it
comes to this, and many situations that Trump and you

(06:46):
go back, you know, to the last his last administration.
How many times did he make things harder on himself
that he didn't need to. But some of this is
on the Supreme Court because the Supreme Court they worked
as how should we say this, They didn't really specify

(07:11):
certain things with instructions, but they're all so worried about
the look, you know, with Roberts, he doesn't want to overstep,
which is good. So it's kind of vague. Yesterday we
talked a bit about this. Alanderswiz.

Speaker 8 (07:22):
Well, first of all, the court did not do a
particularly good job.

Speaker 6 (07:27):
The Supreme Court.

Speaker 8 (07:28):
In order to get to be nine to nothing, they
had to compromise all over the place. So they said, basically, look,
the authority lies with the foreign policy of the United States.
Court shouldn't interfere with that. If he is going to
come back, you should facilitate it. But we're not going
to have any deadlines. So the Trump administration, stretching the

(07:49):
opinion in its favor, says, well, they didn't give us
a deadline, and they didn't order him to be brought back.
They said facilitated. He shouldn't be brought back. He should
be given a hearing quickly on the issue of whether
he has a legitimate claim of sanctuary and then he
should be sent back because he's not a US citizen.

(08:10):
Once you're not a US citizen and you're here illegally,
your rights are very, very constraints. This is not like
the Khalil case, where he's a green cart. It's not
even a student visa. He may have a visa, but
the question is if he came illegally in the beginning,
he has no right to stay here, accept subject to
the humanitarian claim that if he sent back, the gangs

(08:31):
are going to kill him. That's his claim.

Speaker 2 (08:34):
So who would take him? That's also been the conversation
that people are having. Well, okay, so you want to
send him, where are we going to send him? Who's
going to take him? So you bring him back, you
give him a hearing. And remember they shouldn't have sent
him to El Salvador, but they had every right to
send him somewhere because he already had an order to

(08:54):
be removed. Shouldn't be This is this is the problem
with the Democrats. You guys are continuing to fight a
fight that you've already lost, and you're continuing to throw
the same thing and the same arguments at something where
you're going to continue to lose and I'm a due

(09:15):
process guy.

Speaker 3 (09:16):
I think we should bring him back. I think we
should him his day in court.

Speaker 2 (09:19):
But I am flabbergasted that you fight this fight over
and over again, where you know it's a losing argument
for a vast majority of America.

Speaker 6 (09:28):
And I think the issue here is it's not every Democrat,
but a lot of Democrats, Democratic elected officials and Democratic
activist types and major donors hate Donald Trump.

Speaker 3 (09:40):
And I use that word advisedly.

Speaker 6 (09:42):
I don't throw it around, but they hate him, and
they don't understand why everyone doesn't. I always say to people,
just because you hate them doesn't mean the average voter
who's a swing voter hates them. But they view everything.
When you hate someone, everything that person does is viewed.
This a ten out of ten, the worst thing since
still in the blank, and when everything is a mountain

(10:03):
fall hills and you get into a boy who Cried
Wolfe situation. I'm throwing like a thousand cliches, But the
broader point I'm trying to make you is I just
think he keeps getting them to fight on his ground.

Speaker 3 (10:17):
And that's what he's doing here. They've blown it up.

Speaker 2 (10:22):
If they would have went to him quietly not made
this a ridiculous social justice crazy flag waving, insane you know, martyrdom.

Speaker 3 (10:37):
You know, we're gonna hold this guy up. Situation.

Speaker 2 (10:39):
If they would have just went and said, hey, I
think this guy needs to come back, you don't make
a big deal out of it, I think this ends
in a much different way. But they go and they said, oh, well,
here's another place we could fight.

Speaker 3 (10:52):
What about like Harvard.

Speaker 6 (10:53):
We're not talking about it, but I think the Harvard
thing is is another great thing.

Speaker 3 (10:58):
We're gonna talk about it later. Show don't worry.

Speaker 6 (11:00):
Yeah, and you're going to defend a university that gets
has a fifty three billion dollar endowment because they are
not getting two billion dollars from the federal government that
I guarantee people didn't even know they were getting.

Speaker 3 (11:11):
Like just the politics of that.

Speaker 2 (11:13):
Fenver's Donald Trump one, keep doing what you're doing, You'll
keep getting what you're getting. And if you're going to fight,
pick and choose the right way to fight, when to attack,
when not to attack. What you're doing is he says,
come fight my sandbox. He set up traps for you.
You go fight in the sandbox, and then you wonder

(11:34):
why you got your ass kicked three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson's show,
is your ex, your Insta all the other things.

Speaker 3 (11:42):
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(12:04):
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Speaker 3 (12:07):
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Speaker 3 (12:33):
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Speaker 2 (12:36):
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Bedson Show. Is your ex your Insta? Coming up later?
We got our man Jason Whitlock joining the program. Very
interesting conversation I had with him yesterday. Plus it's Wednesday.

(12:57):
We'll do some woke stuff.

Speaker 3 (12:58):
Chad Benson Show, Chad Benson.

Speaker 1 (13:11):
The Democrats have.

Speaker 9 (13:12):
Been writing they are the Party of violence, they are
the party go.

Speaker 3 (13:23):
MTG.

Speaker 2 (13:24):
Yesterday Marjorie Taylor Green for those of you keeping score,
had a town hall and we better figure this out.
We have to figure this out. And I'm saying that
because political violence, the temperature in this country right now
is raised exponentially, and at some point in time, sooner

(13:46):
rather than later, it's not going to be a failed
attempt at something. It is going to be something worse.
Past weekend with Joshapiro, governor of Pennsylvania, that nutjob tried
to burn down the governor's mansion, had a hammer, wanted
to beat him with it.

Speaker 3 (14:08):
Last night MTG.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
Marjorie Taylor Green, for those of you again keeping score,
at her town hall being confronted by several people that
were there to disrupt. They weren't there to have a conversation.
They were there to yell, wouldn't leave. Eventually somebody got tased. Bro,

(14:30):
you don't want that. You don't want that. But I
feel like it's not if, but when somebody assassinates one
of these politicians, we don't want it to happen. But
like I said, the temperature in this room is rising exponentially,

(14:53):
the room being America. And when you've got people that
are praising the likes of Mangione that poll out.

Speaker 3 (15:00):
That we did last week where the left is hey,
you know what, Yeah, violence is good, It's okay.

Speaker 9 (15:07):
Right.

Speaker 2 (15:07):
You know, you've got people going online saying, yeah, go
after Trump and Musk. You had not one, but two
assassination attempts less than a year ago against then candidate Trump,
and now you are getting heated, heated.

Speaker 3 (15:31):
Town halls. I just think it's a matter of time.

Speaker 2 (15:39):
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson Show X and your Instagram.

Speaker 3 (15:44):
What do you think?

Speaker 2 (15:45):
Let me know right here on the Chad Benson Show.
And I'm not talking about people that are mentally disturbed.
I think that guy this weekend who went after Shapiro
is couver cocoa puffs. But I'm talking about people who
are doing it based on politics. And when I say

(16:11):
based on politics, like I said, I think the guy
that was going after Shapiro, and I'm not trying to
be judgmental here, Judging by what I see and the
actions of what I see, I don't think he's all there.
I'm talking about people that are driven by politics, by

(16:36):
some twisted ideology that they are doing America and the
world a better place by unaliving some people that they
think are evil because they don't like their politics. That's
domestic terrorists. In an absolute nutshell, that's domestic terrorist. And

(17:00):
we've got people who are actively talking about it's totally
fine to destroy a Tesla because Elon Musk is this it.

Speaker 3 (17:11):
It boggles the mind that you would think that's a
good idea.

Speaker 2 (17:16):
People going online talking about, Yeah, go after Trump, go
after Musk, get rid of these people.

Speaker 3 (17:21):
They're Nazis, They're all of these things.

Speaker 2 (17:23):
They are pushing the envelope, and somebody is going to
open that envelope sooner rather than later. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four, twenty three. Let me know what
you think. This is the Chad Benson.

Speaker 10 (17:37):
Joe Son, Chad Benson Joe.

Speaker 1 (18:01):
The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (18:03):
Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, friends of all ages, sexes, genders.

Speaker 3 (18:09):
You know what time it is. It's Wednesday.

Speaker 1 (18:12):
Buckle up, everybody.

Speaker 11 (18:13):
It's time to talk about my pronouns.

Speaker 12 (18:15):
When babies are born, the doctor looks at them and
they make a guess.

Speaker 3 (18:18):
About whether the baby is a boy or girl.

Speaker 1 (18:21):
But sometimes the doctor is wrong. She Lucy is a ghost?

Speaker 3 (18:27):
Are the pronoun they them say? There was two of them.
Fun thing about you yesterday?

Speaker 1 (18:33):
I came out of transfer family.

Speaker 13 (18:35):
Don' let's go rock brocks pronouns.

Speaker 3 (18:37):
That sounds so cool.

Speaker 14 (18:40):
Let me introduce you to our non binary I am
non binary and I use say them pronouns.

Speaker 15 (18:44):
And my students know this.

Speaker 1 (18:45):
We just came up with new words that fit us better.

Speaker 11 (18:48):
It's fine.

Speaker 3 (18:49):
What if I want to be called sir Elton John.

Speaker 2 (18:53):
It's time for woke Wednesday, tamed agid walk on Wednesday.

Speaker 3 (19:00):
I threw that in there like a jingle. Didn't really work,
did it. Let's go?

Speaker 1 (19:03):
I am gender, queer, trans masque, and queer.

Speaker 16 (19:06):
What's transmask?

Speaker 15 (19:07):
Transmusk is like people under the non binary umbrella identifying
like or presenting mask masculine.

Speaker 17 (19:14):
Yeah, what about you, I'm.

Speaker 1 (19:16):
Trans and my sexuality is unlabeled.

Speaker 6 (19:20):
I use him.

Speaker 3 (19:21):
Pronounced what what you're you're joking?

Speaker 2 (19:31):
Right, like, what do you The amount of time people
spend thinking about this stuff and we go back to this,
it is very much a look at me society. Everybody
wants to have a label because if you can put
a label on it, you can become part of the intersectionality,
which means, now I'm not just a straight white person.

(19:55):
I have all of these labels. Like you're in the military,
but it's a gender military, and so you've got all
the you know, it's like you've joined the Eagle Scouts
of pronouns and gender fluid play.

Speaker 18 (20:14):
What that means to me a little bit more fluid
whatever turns.

Speaker 3 (20:17):
John see her it.

Speaker 12 (20:20):
I feel like, honestly, honestly, it should not be a
bad thing. Like I've talked to Meigle with Day and them,
and I'm like, well, in the grammar of themes, I mean,
I guess it because like you're it, you're the thing,
Like it shouldn't be a bad name.

Speaker 3 (20:36):
It should just be home. She I guess you could
call me gay.

Speaker 13 (20:40):
I'm homo flexible.

Speaker 18 (20:42):
Really, I do, like some women, but it's mostly.

Speaker 3 (20:45):
Mentioned, Wow, homo flexible.

Speaker 2 (20:51):
In the futures, we're not going to be able to
have love songs because it's gonna sound like I fell
in Love with Day themn. She her mask, presenting it's
zazo frog fro. Yeah, that's not a good song. It's

(21:15):
not a good song at all. That's a horrible song. Chad,
how about one more?

Speaker 19 (21:20):
The day I went to a restaurant with my girlfriend
and my four year old, and the server came up
and said hello, ladies, and proceeded to take our drink order.
And as soon as the server left, my four year
old looked at.

Speaker 1 (21:32):
Me and just gasped and was like, they called you
a lady.

Speaker 19 (21:35):
She also corrected a family member the other day who
she heard me and just went they them. They then
they them over and over again until they acknowledged her.
All that to say, if my freshly four year old
can figure out pronouns, so can your boomer parents.

Speaker 2 (21:49):
No more excuses, No, no, you know what, My boomer
parents don't need to figure any of that stuff out.
One of them is no longer with us, and I
can honestly say at this point in time, yeah, he's
probably thankful for that, and no, it's not gonna happen.

Speaker 3 (22:06):
It's just when does.

Speaker 2 (22:13):
My responsibility end with recognizing what pretend thing you want
to be today so you can feel good about yourself.
I'm just curious about that.

Speaker 18 (22:27):
Kay.

Speaker 3 (22:29):
We move on, kids, Oh we do?

Speaker 2 (22:32):
We move from there to Harvard University, because you'll see,
Harvard is having some issues with the President of the
United States.

Speaker 20 (22:40):
Harvard doubling down, vowing it will not surrender its independence
or relinquish its constitutional rights. Neither Harvard nor any private
university can allow itself to be taken over by the
federal government.

Speaker 3 (22:54):
I don't want the federal government.

Speaker 2 (23:00):
In the colleges the way that I think that maybe
Trump and them would like to be, which is, you know,
I mean, you've heard all kinds of things that being said.
You guys that kind of did this to yourself.

Speaker 3 (23:15):
What's that supposed to me? You are supposed to be a.

Speaker 2 (23:19):
Bastion of free speech, of intellectual openness and opportunities to
come there, and you've become a left wing think tank
for ninety percent of the colleges in this country who
push out insane things like pronouns matter, and that's how
we get to the place where we've got this bizarro

(23:41):
world of wokeness in insanity. It's not an open place.
There's no intellectual honesty and conversation. That's not I did
a video. If you miss it, go check it out
on the YouTube Like and subscribe Chad Benson Show. But
I talked about when I was younger, and even in
today's world, the thought of it's your first time really

(24:06):
away from home. For most people, away from the family.
You're independent, you're living on your own. The reality of
what it used to be, which is, hey, you know what,
maybe you grew up in a very conservative household. The
first time you're really going to be around a lot
of people who maybe have differing ideas, or you grew
up in a very liberal household, and you may be

(24:26):
around some people have some conservative ideas, and it was
a place where, you know, everybody came together and they
debated and they had those ideas along with all the
other trappings to go with college.

Speaker 3 (24:38):
At the party and the drinking and all the other stuff.
It's not that anymore.

Speaker 2 (24:43):
It's an indoctrination facility in many places, and they did
this to themselves. Now, I don't want Trump and anybody
else in they're telling them what they can and can't do.
But it's hard, as we talked about it earlier, for
America to go. I feel bad for you that they
might take some money away from you. You've got fifty

(25:05):
four billion dollars in your endowment, so most Americans aren't
crying boo who.

Speaker 3 (25:12):
Now, as I said yesterday.

Speaker 2 (25:14):
I pointed out in my intellectual honesty here, a vast
majority of the money that comes in to colleges, especially
things like say Hovid, is research money. Now that's six
hundred and thirty eight million or eighty three million, I
forgot what it was that they got last year. Only
about thirty three million went to the classroom, but the

(25:35):
rest of it went to research, and that is important,
and they do a good that benefits society and all
of that stuff that we should hope it benefits. What's
happened here though, is yes, politics of Palestine and lobbying

(26:01):
of certain groups has definitely caused the administration to move.
But even before the administration, this one was in there.
There was strong voices on the outside who went to
these schools who were saying there is no diversity of

(26:24):
thought on these campuses, and if it was any other
group other than the Jews, this wouldn't be happening. We're
going to talk a little bit more about it next
hour because there was a very interesting conversation last night
with Schrmichael Singleton and Abby Phillips on CNN about this

(26:47):
particular subject, including the diversity of thought on campus.

Speaker 3 (26:51):
So we'll be talking about that a little bit later.

Speaker 2 (26:53):
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I had a great conversation yesterday with Jason Whitlock. It
was about an hour long. I'm going to play some
of that and it is very interesting. We do that
straight ahead right here on the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (28:17):
Irre like, yeah, so what it's the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (28:23):
Yesterday, I had a great opportunity to sit down with
Jason Whitlock. Could be controversial at times.

Speaker 3 (28:28):
You don't know who he is.

Speaker 2 (28:29):
He is a used to be a former sports writer,
worked at ESPN, worked at Fox Now more of the
political side of things, to say the least really against
woke ideology and insanity and very much pro men, especially
when it comes to the black community. And it was
a great conversation talking about a lot of different things,
but one of the first questions out of the gate,

(28:52):
I asked him, what's about fathers and men and how
we've devalued them in this country over the last few
decades to the point where there's no doubt society's got
an issue. And it's not hard in a lot of
ways to point at what that issue is and how
that issue got as bad.

Speaker 3 (29:08):
As it is. We've devalued fathers, and you've talked about this.
I've listening for you. You've talked about this.

Speaker 2 (29:13):
We've devalued fathers first in the black home and the
black community, and the destruction there, you know, is insane.
I was watching a guy to an interview the other day.
It was the most fascinating thing. He was talking about
the one of the guards that he met that kind
of became his girlfriend, and he had a phone and
he was worried about getting caught, but he said, don't
worry because my selly was my dad who was in

(29:34):
for double murder.

Speaker 3 (29:35):
And that's like the first time they'd kind of ever
been together.

Speaker 2 (29:38):
And I thought to myself, you want to find out
where father listeners get you and the devaluation of men
in society, go to a.

Speaker 16 (29:43):
Prison, Chad, You've teed me up perfectly. I melt down
about this issue virtually daily. No one wants to deal
with the obvious consequences of the destruction of the nuclear family.
And I talk about this constantly, like Black America has
been the lab rats for the liberal agenda of destroying

(30:04):
the nuclear family. And let's look honestly and boldly and
transparently at the results of the destruction of the family.
Our young men, they have no emotional control. Go look
at it. And I've talked about this on my show This
Carmelo Anthony, Austin menchasis away in Frisco, Texas. Black men

(30:26):
have been programmed through prison culture and the spread of
prison culture through rap music. They've been programmed. Anything they
perceive as disrespectful requires an aggressive response, if not a
violent response. And so Carmelo Anthony gets asked to move
out of a tent where he doesn't belong and he

(30:47):
feels disrespected and feels he has to respond in an
aggressive fashion. Oh, he put his hands on me. Therefore
I stab him in the heart. And so what happened
to this seventeen year old suburb been a white kid
and it's a tragedy. And I only bring up race
to say that what Austin Metcalf experience goes on in

(31:08):
Chicago and these urban areas. Every single day, some young
black boy that's caught up in this what they call
black culture, which is hip hop culture, which is prison culture.
They feel a tiny twinge of disrespect and say, I'm
gonna shoot or I'm going to turn violent towards this person.
Most of the time, it only affects young black men

(31:32):
in those urban areas, but that mentality is spreading out
to our suburbs. That mentality and this destruction of the
nuclear family. They want all ethnicities to experience this. And
we're seeing the divorce rate and the lack of marriage
rates in other demographics, including the white Democrats, escalate, and eventually,
once they tear down they've already done it to the

(31:54):
black family. Eighty percent of these kids are being born
to single mamas in single parent households. It's now let's
move it on to the rest of the culture. And
now let's poison all of culture. That these rappers that
are basic thugs. They promote a degenerate lifestyle. There are

(32:16):
mainstream entertainers. We're platforming them at the super Bowl and
celebrating them as if they bring something positive to the culture.
It's a nihilistic mindset that they want to impose on
all of America. You can sit there in the comfort
of your home or suburb and think, Wow, that's not
really my problem. Trust me. They want it to be

(32:38):
your problem, and they're trying to make it your problem.
And that's why there's so much promotion of non nuclear families.
They're trying to destroy the nuclear family, get us all
involved in relationships that don't produce family, don't properly develop
young men or young girls, make sex or identities, sexual identity,

(33:00):
gender identity very fluid, where men look like women and
women look like men, and we're all the same, we're
not all the same. We have to stay in this fight.
We can't allow them to use fear of you being
called racist, and so that's why they try to frame
all these things. They're doing this, well, this is black

(33:21):
and you're being racist against the black culture because they
want to shout you down and bully you down so
that you don't speak against this stuff. This stuff is
just very important, said it is. I saw this lady
there today. She was brilliant. She was talking about the
things that nobody wants to talk about.

Speaker 2 (33:36):
Jase is, if you are married and you have a child,
chances of them going to jail are virtually nil. If
you're a single woman and you have a child, chances
of your kid going to a child is exponentially greater.
If you're a male and you have a child and
your single father, the chances of them going to jail
is the same as a married couple. Boom, and yet
we have completely devalued men. I am a father first

(33:58):
and foremost. All this other stuff I do in life
is whatever it is. It matters most that I raise
young men and women that are strong. And we have
lost our way where it's not important being a parent.

Speaker 3 (34:09):
You know.

Speaker 2 (34:09):
I heard Ronan Chapel the other day say, all my
friends who have kids are miserable. This is not a
safe place and a place that is great for our
society move forward.

Speaker 3 (34:18):
Well, kids are in.

Speaker 16 (34:19):
The most jeopardy when you remove a man from a home, absolutely,
and when mother and father aren't together again, kids become
more vulnerable because there's less supervision. We always love to
talk about how the police engage with young people. Well,
the first police officers should be called mama and daddy,
and those are the people that need to be supervising

(34:41):
discipline your kids rather than worrying about when they leave
the home and you're not around, how do they engage
with police? What type of supervision are you providing them
in your home? And to your point about male leadership
is being demonized in America, we think the more we
I'm a former college football player, My background is in

(35:03):
sports media. Are you sure you want to swear I
made my name talking about sports. They've convinced us that hey,
if we just add more women to football, if we
get more women coaching football, if we get more women
involved in football, that's going to make things better because
and the other side of the message they're leaving out
is because men are evil, they're toxically masculine, and it's

(35:26):
just not true. We need more male leadership, not less.

Speaker 2 (35:31):
Three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson Show, is your ex in your Instagram?
Right here on the Chad Benson Show. That is just
a portion of the interview I did yesterday with Jason Whitlock.
We're going to play some more in the third hour,
dealing with America, immigration, our societal values, a lot of

(35:55):
great stuff. It's an interesting interview. Some people may agree,
some people may disagree. Some people may like his take,
may not like his take. I find him fascinating, very gracious,
and like I said, if you have a chance, check
out the podcast. You grab that at chadbensonshow dot com.

Speaker 3 (36:16):
This is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (36:25):
This is the Chad Benson Show. The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (36:54):
With all the talk of immigration and Harvard and all
the other things we forget.

Speaker 3 (36:59):
We're in the midst of a giant tariff battle from
the heartland.

Speaker 1 (37:03):
A call for patients.

Speaker 21 (37:04):
China is a major consumer of American beef and soybeans,
but this Iowa farmer says Trump's tariffs could bring a
more fair market in the long term.

Speaker 18 (37:14):
Were people that put crops in the ground and wait
four months.

Speaker 10 (37:17):
For something to happen, so we're kind of learned to
be patient.

Speaker 21 (37:21):
The Trump administration says it is actively considering fifteen tariff
deals with different countries to help bring jobs and revenue
back to the US. As for China, the White House says,
the balls in their court.

Speaker 2 (37:34):
It's the economy, stupid, it's the economy. I was talking
to an economist yesterday who deals mostly in local, like
state economies, not on the global side of stuff. But
the few economists I have talked to both at that

(37:56):
local level where they deal specifically in place like Arizona, Texas,
things that nature. But I've talked to a few other
ones who are pretty damn big economists.

Speaker 3 (38:07):
Trying to get them on, you know, a text back
and forth.

Speaker 2 (38:08):
Trying to get them on the show right now is
virtually impossible because I do shows at like twenty eight
different times, and can you do it at three in
the morning. But as we were chatting, I said, give
me honest opinion, and the honest opinion.

Speaker 3 (38:31):
Was, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (38:33):
I think for a lot of because they don't call
you to go onto any of these programs, the news programs,
unless you're gonna have a take that benefits whatever audience
they're serving. Well, I don't know. Seems kind of like

(38:54):
a cop out. It's not a cop out, it's being honest.
First of all, you have no idea how long any
of these things are gonna last. You have no idea
what the endgame is. The thing I've been asking for
a while, which is, what do you think the real
endgame is here?

Speaker 3 (39:13):
Especially with China?

Speaker 2 (39:17):
So I think if people are honest, they don't know
because of so many factors, including the fact that nobody
knows which ones are staying, which ones are going, what
the endgame is here.

Speaker 3 (39:38):
If it's a full battle with China, we're gonna have
a lot of unpleasant times. But so are they.

Speaker 2 (39:45):
And they got a lot of issues, you know, for
all their tiktoks and all the stuff you see, there
are stuff out there too where they're closing lots of plants.

Speaker 3 (39:55):
They understand that there are serious issues here.

Speaker 2 (39:58):
And if we can owined forces and get some of
our allies to say, look, it's us or them. And
again this is if we're thinking long term against them,
you join us, We're gonna cripple their economy. Now would
she want to make a move militarily at that point?
I don't think so. But you understand that that is

(40:19):
one of many avenues. So it's like, you know, there's
ten doors in front of you, and it's a you know,
it's a pick a path kind of thing. And the
only person who knows which path they're going with is Trump.
So it's hard to say, well, what do you think.

Speaker 3 (40:35):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (40:35):
I don't read his mind, but we're gonna find out
when again, I don't know.

Speaker 3 (40:44):
Speaking of Donald Trump.

Speaker 2 (40:46):
Boy, he's evil and such and whatnot and who's what
he is taking on?

Speaker 3 (40:52):
Havevid as you guys know, they're not backing down.

Speaker 20 (40:56):
It's trumpy administration freezing more than two billion dollars in
fiddle there money after Harvard University rejected a list of
government demands, including overhauling hiring admissions practices. Harvard, America's wealthiest university,
not backing down in the face of pressure from President Trump,
was threatening to pull roughly nine billion dollars in federal

(41:16):
aid unless the school makes a slew of changes to
the way it's run.

Speaker 3 (41:21):
A slew of changes.

Speaker 2 (41:24):
So what are those slews of changes? So this is
what the administration is demanding. Key demands elimination of DII programs,
which I'm totally fine with. That's stupid. Recognize this admissions
and hiring practices the administration wants to end consideration of

(41:45):
race and admissions and hiring advocating for strictly.

Speaker 3 (41:48):
Merit based approach. And I'm prom with that.

Speaker 2 (41:52):
Governance reforms demands include restructuring Harvard's leadership to ensure greater
accountability and alignment with federal expectations. And when it comes
to campus protest and free speech, Harvard is being urged
to suppress students protests, particularly those related to pro Palestine sentiments,
and to implement measures ensuring viewpoint diversity. And then this

(42:18):
is the one that you know, I'm not a fan
of that one, and I'll tell you why. And this
one collaboration with federal authorities. University is expected to cooperate
more closely with immigration authorities and allow federal audits of
its academic programs.

Speaker 3 (42:32):
Now, when you want federal money, you may have to
give a little bit in some things.

Speaker 2 (42:39):
The thing about free speech, we should all be fine
with that. Well, I want free speech on campus, but
you're going to treat it as if it's free speech
for everything. So if somebody is a conservative and they
say there's only two genders, you want to kick that
person out of school because he's harmed everybody. But if

(43:02):
You've got people on there who are pro Palestine, anti Israel,
who say Hamas is nothing but a bunch of freedom fighters.
You are okay with that. That's the issue that people have.

Speaker 3 (43:20):
With this.

Speaker 2 (43:21):
So last night on CNN Shermichael Singleton and Abby Phillips
talking about this.

Speaker 22 (43:31):
There is a public good here that comes from America's universities,
not just Harvard. Here's Ron Brownstein on this, Boston and
Austin to Seattle and Silicon Valley. These elite research universities
have served as catalysts for growth in the nation's most
productive regional economies. In the global competition for twenty first
century economic supremacy. Trump's wide ranging assault on America's top

(43:52):
research institutions may come to be seen as a profound
act of unilateral disarmament. We are, is what he's saying,
shooting ourselves in the foot by basically saying we're going
to strip all the research dollars away so that he
Carvid can admit one hundred more conservatives.

Speaker 2 (44:12):
No, no, no, no. First of all, and here's the
perfect example of the DII insanity and whatnot. This is
Shermichael coming back to Abby Phillips with first of all
the insurdity of that. It's again, you've done this to yourself.
No diversity of thought.

Speaker 17 (44:34):
I think from my perspective as a conservative, there really
is a real battle going on in the country right
now between liberalism conservatism, and which of the two ideologies
will lead the country into the next fifty to one
hundred years, particularly as we look at China and what
with their advancements and developments are in terms of USURP
and US lead globally. And I am not certain that

(44:57):
every single liberal institution it's an ivy league.

Speaker 3 (45:01):
I don't think they've.

Speaker 17 (45:01):
Really done enough to have intellectual diversity of thought on
a litany of topics.

Speaker 1 (45:06):
I mean, these places are really reading.

Speaker 22 (45:07):
Grounds for some of the China on the grounds of America,
of domestic political discold.

Speaker 3 (45:18):
Scientific labs.

Speaker 1 (45:19):
It's in the AI lads, it's in the culture.

Speaker 17 (45:23):
Matters, behavior matter, the health of.

Speaker 2 (45:30):
He's right, and you know what, it's not about de I.
This is the battle that's going on. You're trying to
make this argument that, oh, you know, more conservative, more
voices than the other. No, if you want to make
the argument about China, do you think they have a
DEI quota?

Speaker 3 (45:48):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (45:48):
If you're aware of this, probably not very diverse. So
let me ask you this. Do you think they're putting
their best in the brightest on everything based on the
fact that they're the best in the brightest, not based
on the fact that they did an equity statement somewhere.
They're putting their best on the brightest on everything because
they understand it's an arms race and AI, in technology,

(46:11):
across the board, chips, you name it, all of those things.
So to say, well, you know what they're doing is
we're talking about the stuff that's happening in many cases
outside of the classroom and the research room at Harvard.

(46:32):
Because inside of all of these things, if you're gonna
get money from America, from the American taxpayer, if you're
gonna get money, that money should go to fund the
best work based on the best people available, not a quota.
Because if this is an arms race, and I do
believe it is when it comes to AI and stuff

(46:54):
with China, we need to be the leaders and we
need to have the best working on it, not what
checks a box. And look how diverse our group is.

Speaker 22 (47:11):
If China is going to lap us economically and technologically,
it is not going to be because there are five
more Republicans at Harvard. It's going to be because there
is no research.

Speaker 17 (47:22):
You know. You know why they also usurp us abby
because the customers of behavior, the norms and traditions of
values that they value matter in terms of their success
as a people.

Speaker 3 (47:31):
That is, we're lessons of the importance of.

Speaker 17 (47:34):
Those things in our own com I so we.

Speaker 22 (47:36):
Got to go butt. I love that conversation because I
think it's a great one about how American values right
now stack up against what China is doing.

Speaker 2 (47:46):
Yeah, because China is out to win. They're playing to
win merit based. They're doing what needs to be done.
We are trying to make everybody happy by checking boxes

(48:07):
and we want to have some sort of Look, it's
multiculturalism that won the day. No, what wins the day
is the best period, regardless of color of skin, gender, religion.
What wins the day is the best three two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson show it

(48:27):
to Twitter, your Instagram, all the things for capital uncertainty,
don't be uncertain call my buddies over board eight sixty six,
seven seventy nine Risk talk to them today about what
they can do for you when it comes to things
like your investments, your retirement. My buddy's act Abram chievestment

(48:51):
officer is going to walk you through what it is
that they do, where they think the market's going, not
just here but globally, and how they can build a
plan that works for you. Not something that's cookie cutter.
Call them set up a second opinion today. It's not
going to cost anything. A little bit of time. And you, guys,
hear Zach here all the time. You know he needs.

Speaker 3 (49:12):
Business and he's great at what he does.

Speaker 2 (49:14):
I trust him, and so should you call eight sixty
six seven seven nine Risk Today. Talk to my friends
over at Bullwork, get your second opinion or check out
everything they do at no your Risk Radio dot com.
Know you Risk radio dot Com for Bullwork Capital Investment
Advisorserver's offer you Treck Financial LLC and sec Register Investment
Advisor investments of all risk not a guarantee pastorformance, not

(49:34):
guarantee future results Trek two four one seventy three. This
here be the Chad Benson Show. Chad Benson, Oh my god,
is that.

Speaker 3 (49:51):
The crypt keeper?

Speaker 23 (49:53):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (49:53):
Whoa, No, that's the former president. I didn't even know
he was still around. That's not very nice, Chad, Ladies
and gentlemen, boys and girls, friends of all ages, Joe Biden.

Speaker 24 (50:05):
More than one hundred days, this stew administration has made
so much done so much damage, and so much destruction.

Speaker 10 (50:12):
It's kind of breathtaking.

Speaker 24 (50:13):
It could happen that soon. Have taken a hasht to
the Social Security Administration.

Speaker 3 (50:17):
Have not Why do you lie? Why do you lie?

Speaker 2 (50:21):
You know it's watching a piece yes or anything with
Chris Cuomo saying there's no reason to lie about. There's
plenty of stuff you want to go after Trump that's
out there, but lying about Social Security and taking away
benefits is well, they took away the you know, the
way that you go and you verify, they change that

(50:43):
because they heard from the people. And what does Trump
do in situations like that? He pivots. You want to
be mad at Trump for a lot of things. It's
there's plenty of it out there. You don't need a lie,
but you can't help yourself because you have zero ideas.
The ideas you do have and the hills you want

(51:05):
to die on are ones where you essentially lost the
last election. Just a few months ago, immigration being one
of them, and we've talked about that. That's the hill
you want to die on. Today we're going to go
fly out Del Salvador because they kidnapped that guy. And

(51:26):
we can talk about due process, let's do that, but
you want to go and it's I have never seen
people run at worst decisions like the Democratic Party does.

Speaker 3 (51:42):
They are rudderless.

Speaker 2 (51:44):
They and when they do finally fix the rudder a
little bit, they decide, hey, let's head over to that place.

Speaker 3 (51:52):
And you're like, that's a that's a reef. We're going
to crash into that.

Speaker 2 (51:55):
You're like, yeah, let's do that, Let's do that, and
then they do it, and then they sink it is.
It is amazing, Yet here we are.

Speaker 24 (52:04):
Social Security is more than the government program. It's a
sacred promise.

Speaker 3 (52:08):
Why are you yelling?

Speaker 24 (52:09):
We made it as in a sacred promise. Seventy three
million Americans receive Social Security from the first paycheck for
their entire life. They pay in to Social Security.

Speaker 2 (52:22):
Three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chadbentson shows, your Twitter, tweet at as text
the program.

Speaker 24 (52:30):
And return they can solid security be for them when
they're going to need.

Speaker 2 (52:35):
It, and rather than say, hey, we should fix it
because it's going to go bankrupt being solvent, your thing
is you scream and yell and offer up nothing to
fix it. And then when there is a conversation you
lie about that. I know, I know it's X, but

(52:55):
it sounds weird. What do you say X?

Speaker 3 (52:57):
And then X the program? I don't that?

Speaker 2 (52:59):
Just oh my lord, And it's not hard to have
a conversation about SOLI security and then tell the country, look,
benefits aren't being cut, but we're going to have to
change the way we do some things. The younger generation,
you're going to be living longer, and because of that,

(53:20):
we're going to extend the retirement age. So if you're
on Social Security right now, getting ready to receive none
of that stuff is going to change even when you
get older. If you're younger, you're going to still continue
to receive solid security, but we have to adjust or
there's going to be serious issues. And then on the

(53:43):
other side of it, you go in and you say,
let's raise the.

Speaker 16 (53:46):
Cap on.

Speaker 2 (53:51):
Social Security when it comes to income, which will fix
a lot of that hard, but it's not about actually
fixing it. It's about scoring political points at this moment
in time, and the easiest thing to do is, rather

(54:12):
than explain it to people, let's.

Speaker 3 (54:15):
Just scare them. If you're listening to show, grab the
podcast Chad Benson.

Speaker 10 (54:18):
Chow, then Chad Benson Joe.

Speaker 1 (54:41):
The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 3 (54:44):
It is Wednesday.

Speaker 2 (54:45):
We like to have fun on Wednesdays. We do some
stuff that we enjoy. It's woke Wednesday.

Speaker 3 (54:51):
It's that time of the week where we get you
woke correctly.

Speaker 1 (54:55):
Not only are they act hurting our kids?

Speaker 3 (54:56):
Corectlish make everything better correctly?

Speaker 1 (55:00):
Hi, just my gender is a complete nightmare?

Speaker 6 (55:02):
Can trans women get breast feet?

Speaker 3 (55:04):
And this is great news?

Speaker 12 (55:05):
No?

Speaker 6 (55:06):
No, no, here's something I need to tell you.

Speaker 3 (55:08):
So, Princess who came to your ball tonight was me?

Speaker 1 (55:11):
I'm Gonzarella.

Speaker 2 (55:13):
That's the one where Harry waves the magic wand and
turns everybody back to their select gender. Miss Danny It
you can't speculate about someone's sexuality unless they're famous or.

Speaker 24 (55:24):
Pepper and Patty.

Speaker 3 (55:25):
It's time for woke Wednesday. Woke time.

Speaker 25 (55:29):
You know what's funny is white liberals are the ones
that gave the definition of woke to whites. On the right,
so they don't nobody know white people really understand it
seems what that word really meant when they took it
from black people. So people on the right just thinks
it means an insufferable, self involved liberal douche.

Speaker 3 (55:46):
And they're not wrong.

Speaker 25 (55:48):
If they're talking about a white person right running around
crying about their pronouns is like the sun is like
lighting the planet on fire. Thankfu, How scared you are
about pronouns.

Speaker 3 (55:58):
It's unbelievable. It's true.

Speaker 2 (56:03):
The word woke for for liberal whites is like, that's
the the bat signal.

Speaker 3 (56:12):
Did somebody somebody miss Jenner?

Speaker 2 (56:14):
Somebody got I gotta call, I gotta come and and and.

Speaker 3 (56:21):
Sort it out.

Speaker 2 (56:22):
Oh jeez, so funny. So it is woke Wenesday. We
like to have fun. This is not fun. I was
talking to my wife earlier about this, and I did
video last night.

Speaker 3 (56:34):
Go to the YouTube. Check it out and appreciate it.

Speaker 2 (56:37):
When you do that, it's Chad Benzi Chow YouTube, and
you subscribe, like, uh, this is a handout that kids
had to do in middle school that these parents are
upset about. Now, I'm gonna tell you, I can't read

(56:57):
you a vast majority of the handout. Otherwise I would
be in some serious, serious, serious.

Speaker 3 (57:10):
Doo doo deep with the FCC. So ian't to let
you know that these.

Speaker 11 (57:18):
Things keep happening over and over again, and I'm tired
of having to fight for the right of my child
and every other child to not have sexual content pushed
on them.

Speaker 1 (57:30):
They're in middle school.

Speaker 3 (57:32):
Please let them.

Speaker 11 (57:33):
Go through puberty without this stuff being pushed on them.

Speaker 3 (57:39):
Now you're thinking to yourself, what's in there? Again? I
can't read.

Speaker 2 (57:43):
A lot of these are parents who not only got
wind of what was in this thing, kids had to
take a survey, they had a chance to opt out.
Even when they did, their kids were still essentially forced
to take it. And watching the smug sobs just sit
there it. You want to know why choice, You want

(58:04):
to know why parents are pissed. You want to know
why homeschools become a bigger option. Do you want to
know why a lot of that stuff's happening? And I'm
not blaming the teachers. Are there some out there that
are wackados, of course, but we have this bizarre world where,
for whatever reason, reason and common sense is the first
thing to exit the room before the meeting even starts.

(58:28):
And it's hard not to look at something like this
and think, whoever put this together has some serious issues.

Speaker 11 (58:35):
Parents are tired of it.

Speaker 2 (58:37):
I don't like to be up here.

Speaker 3 (58:39):
I hate this. I hate conflict.

Speaker 11 (58:41):
But what I hate more is knowing the impact of
kids of this stuff getting pushed on them.

Speaker 1 (58:46):
And normalizing into them.

Speaker 11 (58:47):
I was one of those parents who opted my kid out,
because as soon as I saw it, I said, I don't.

Speaker 1 (58:52):
Want my kid taking this, and he took it, and.

Speaker 11 (58:54):
I'm disgusted that he had to answer those questions.

Speaker 2 (58:57):
Did he take it?

Speaker 1 (58:58):
They told him he had to take it.

Speaker 11 (58:59):
And he didn't get anything up.

Speaker 2 (59:01):
They told me how to take it. You gotta take it,
but I my mom didn't want me to take it.
They're eleven, by the way, they're eleven.

Speaker 1 (59:11):
Explained to me.

Speaker 26 (59:12):
When I'm supposed to tell my eleven year old daughter
about butt.

Speaker 11 (59:15):
An aint of sex and sex toys, please, I'll give
you the rest of my time.

Speaker 3 (59:22):
And the crickets came.

Speaker 2 (59:25):
Nobody was in the room and said, hey, you know what, guys,
I'm thinking, no, I'm thinking this is in the survey
for the kids. I'm thinking that this is a No.
Kids don't need to be talking about oral and all
the other things. They don't need to be taught eleven.

(59:48):
I want to remind everybody they're eleven. They don't even
talking about any of this. They grew up too fast
with too much exposure. They don't need this in the schools.
And I don't know who thought it was a good idea,
but it wasn't a good idea. It wasn't. Some of

(01:00:12):
it included things like where the front goes into the front.

Speaker 3 (01:00:20):
Get a little bit more.

Speaker 2 (01:00:21):
I don't wanna say graphic, but I talk a little
bit more about it on the video because I again,
I'm an adult and I can't even talk about this
stuff on the air. Why do I think an eleven
year old should have it? I don't. It's called youth
Risky Behavior survey. Why are we doing a survey about

(01:00:49):
risky behavior? You're not asking me if I, Hey, did
you ride a bike and jump off the roof of
somebody's house with your bike into a pool? That was
a risky behavior. I did that as a key. That
wasn't on any of my surveys as a kid, because
I didn't do any surveys as a kid not like this,

(01:01:14):
and somebody totally was like, yeah, let's do this. So
of course then you have to hear from people on
the old inner webs, which I'm totally fine with. And
it's the usual, okay, insane that you think this is
somehow an indictment on public education and discussed discussing that

(01:01:35):
you participate in blatant propaganda, politicizing everything when deliberately ignoring
the real corrupt and damage done to the American people.
I'm a Carnival barker with twelve listeners. Do you think
this is a good thing? If this was a one off,
people talk about it. I could do one of these
every day if I wanted to. There's a meeting almost

(01:01:56):
every day where something like this pops up. This is
not a one off. There's far more to this than
I think people realize. The numbers bear out that more
and more people are doing what homeschooling. They want schools
where there's choice. They want more control over the curriculum

(01:02:19):
and what kids are being taught, which used to be hey,
we're gonna teach you how to read, we teach you
to write, we're gonna teach you how to critical think, somewhat.
Most of that critical thinking, though, and where he learned
to problem solve was all on the playground stuff. We
don't do that anymore. But this is you know, you know,
this is what we're gonna do now. It's like, hey,
here's a survey. Have you ever done fentanyl? Like I'm four?

Speaker 3 (01:02:45):
But that is the maybe so crazy And here's the
other side of it.

Speaker 2 (01:02:51):
Let's just say that some of these kids are like, oh, yeah,
I'm doing all this stuff all the time.

Speaker 3 (01:02:55):
I can't stop it.

Speaker 2 (01:02:56):
Are you telling the parents that probably not just ridiculous
it is And this shouldn't be controversial. I don't shield
my fourteen year olds from all of the world, but
I do monitor stuff, and I do know that there
are some things that we'll have a conversation about when

(01:03:17):
and if the time is right.

Speaker 3 (01:03:19):
And this stuff here.

Speaker 23 (01:03:22):
Is not.

Speaker 2 (01:03:25):
Something that should be handed out to eleven year olds.
Somebody thought it was a good idea, and the way
that they sit there with they're like, eh.

Speaker 3 (01:03:35):
And I love like everybody comes back here. There's another person.

Speaker 2 (01:03:38):
We have a president who frequently walked in on children
in the dressing room during his child beauty pageants.

Speaker 27 (01:03:43):
What is it?

Speaker 3 (01:03:43):
Wait, what. Oh my lord, this is where people go.
You have no argument.

Speaker 2 (01:03:54):
So your argument is, well, you're stupid and Donald Trump
is a Nazi, racist, pedophile. That is the argument you have,
which is a ridiculous argument. You can't defend this because
there is no defense of something like this.

Speaker 3 (01:04:12):
There isn't.

Speaker 2 (01:04:13):
If I can't read it on the air, my eleven
year old shouldn't be doing a school project with it.

Speaker 3 (01:04:20):
Oh, I think you're probably right.

Speaker 2 (01:04:21):
Three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson Show. Is your Twitter tweet at
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Speaker 3 (01:04:31):
What is Lean?

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Speaker 27 (01:05:41):
Show, serving up talk radio medium, rare and dripping with irony.

Speaker 1 (01:05:58):
It's Chad Benson.

Speaker 3 (01:06:00):
Is recession hair?

Speaker 2 (01:06:02):
What well?

Speaker 3 (01:06:03):
Chat your ball? Well, I shave my head. It's a
little different recession hair. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:06:09):
Could this be the first indicator that we may be
headed for troubled waters having to do with searches online
and the data that's out there. They start putting stuff together,
and could we be heading towards a slowdown in the

(01:06:31):
economy because women are becoming a little bit more frugal
according to a new study that's out there, especially when
it comes to self care in particular.

Speaker 13 (01:06:41):
There this is really fascinating, right, So it's easier than
ever to buy things online, so it's traceable. So some
of the experts are pointing to Google searches or Amazon
purchases that say, wait, this might be an economic forecast.
If anything, it's just actually fascinating. So if we look
at women, this is a demographic that seems to prioritize

(01:07:01):
self care.

Speaker 1 (01:07:02):
Right, So we see.

Speaker 13 (01:07:03):
Them in twenty twenty five searching for frugal tips and
tricks just in case there could be a shaky economy
in twenty twenty five, so say goodbye to maybe those
priceyed tailor Swift tickets. So the first one I want
to point to is nails, right, So we're seeing that
nail salons, maybe out press on nail searches actually have
jump ten percent in twenty twenty five according to Google

(01:07:25):
blonde maybe out no offense to myself natural maybe more
in there's a seventeen percent jump on Google. So remember
COVID hair, we could now see recession hair.

Speaker 3 (01:07:37):
What ladies shave your head problem solved? Indeed?

Speaker 28 (01:07:43):
Well for me, I find that recession here during this
time is at first it started out more of a
money a budget thing, and then I think when people
have seen how that organic look is just so beautiful
and you can just hances your natural, they're they're loving it.

Speaker 13 (01:08:03):
So enhance your natural and save a little bit. Another
trend that we're seeing, according to Google is DIY fashion,
So social media is flourishing with dupes alternatives to expensive
brands like Nike or Lululemon, and thrifting, which became popular
during COVID, is actually getting more and more popular coupon
follows as eighty five percent of thrifters say they are

(01:08:24):
motivated to save money in a shaky economy, so they're
looking at Goodwill and they're looking at places like Salvation Army.

Speaker 2 (01:08:31):
Wow, we're looking to save money. I thought we should
be looking to spend money. No, it's we're still price motivated.
The ladies are leading us to water. Times are getting tough.
I need some things, but I might have to go cheaper.
By the way, thrifting is fun if you get the
right thrift stores. If you do, like my kids love

(01:08:54):
to go, especially you know my fourteen year olds, they
love to go thrifting because.

Speaker 3 (01:08:58):
They want to find nineties stuff, right.

Speaker 2 (01:09:02):
They're really into like skateboard t shirts or stuff that
they find that's a complete you know, you and I,
but it just says something ridiculous because I think that's
the fashion and they're bringing it back apparently. But this
may be the first indicator from the consumer, not the
indicators from economists. And we can sit there, we can

(01:09:24):
talk about that stuff all day, but well, the economists
say this, that and the other. The first indicator from
the consumer when it comes to searches that maybe people
are starting to brace for something.

Speaker 29 (01:09:37):
Women are also, I think, much more prone to cutting
things for themselves versus things for their families, and I
think that's how you get to things like recession here.
Women are much more likely to say I will give
up these luxuries or these things that I enjoy so that,
you know, my kids can go to summer camp, or
so that we can do these things that we want

(01:09:58):
for our family.

Speaker 3 (01:10:00):
That's what women are willing to do.

Speaker 2 (01:10:02):
That's because you kicked men out, So there you go, Chad.
Speaking of saving money, Peeps now is selling a kit
where you can easter egg it up using marshmallows because
eggs are so expensive. It's like, kids, we can only

(01:10:23):
afford one egg this year, so we're all going to
decorate it together, or you can get the Peeps Marshmallow
decoration kit.

Speaker 3 (01:10:33):
Just don't give them peeps. They're weird. Do you ever
wonder what, like what exactly is a peep?

Speaker 1 (01:10:39):
There may be Just.

Speaker 15 (01:10:40):
Born Quality Confections, a family owned candy maker in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.
Peeps are impossible to escape at Easter time. On average,
about five and a half million of them are made
every day, adding up to roughly two billion per year.
The main ingredients sugar, corn, syrup and gelatin are cooked
to make marshmallows, and then they're shaped and sent through
a sh sugar shower. Originally peeps were only yellow. This

(01:11:03):
Easter there are fifteen different colors and flavors.

Speaker 3 (01:11:07):
Ooh, very exciting. Again, it's a peep.

Speaker 2 (01:11:12):
I don't like marshmallows, even when we go out camping
like we're gonna make shmores.

Speaker 3 (01:11:18):
I don't like marshmallows. Never have. How long does it
take to make a peep?

Speaker 15 (01:11:24):
Originally it took twenty seven hours to make a batch
of peeps, the familiar marshmallow Easter candy that now comes
at a variety of colors. In nineteen fifty, Just Born
Quality Confections came up with a way to speed up
the process and now they make them in less than
six minutes at the same plant in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania where
they were first founded. How many peeps are made a year?
Two billion, roughly six peeps for every man, woman and

(01:11:48):
child in the country.

Speaker 3 (01:11:50):
I didn't think she was going to say two billion.
I think she was going to say too many. I
don't think you like peeps. You are correct in that.

Speaker 2 (01:11:57):
You are correct in that three five, three eight, twenty four,
twenty three. That is your text and comment line at
Chadminson Show x Instagram. Make sure you check out our
Facebook as well, and go to chadbanshow dot com you
grab the podcast see all the latest going on radio

(01:12:17):
The Ched Benson Show.

Speaker 3 (01:12:22):
Coming up, hour number three of the program. We've got
some woke stuff which will be fun.

Speaker 2 (01:12:27):
We got a little what's trending, and we placed some
more of that interview I did yesterday with Jason Whitlock
talking about a lot of things, this time delving into America. Americana.
Things are changing around the world. Can we learn from
some of these European nations who are becoming multi cultural
to the point that it's ruining their culture. We'll talk

(01:12:47):
a bit about that, plus a bunch of other stuff
as well, probably some immigration and tariff stuff. Make sure
you join us every single night, go to our YouTube,
our X and our instead. We are live right around
eight o'clock Eastern, So if you have a chance to
check down our number three of the show straight ahead.
It is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:13:05):
This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:13:34):
Immigration, the Battle of immigration, the constitutional crisis that seems
to arrive every day anytime Donald Trump is around when
it comes to anything ever, and now the latest that
is continuing the saga of immigration at the Supreme Court,
down to the district court, back to the Supreme Court.

(01:13:56):
Over here to the left, back over to the right.
What about this guy from Maryland? But he's a father,
he's a citizen. He's not he was kidnapped a what?

Speaker 3 (01:14:05):
Yeah, wait to hear.

Speaker 14 (01:14:05):
This frustration across the country now boiling over Fort Madison, Iowa.
Angry constituents confronting Republican Senator Chuck Grassley at a town hall.

Speaker 8 (01:14:19):
The people who have been sentenced to life in prison
in a foreign country with no due process.

Speaker 6 (01:14:29):
Trumpston obeyed the Supreme Court.

Speaker 3 (01:14:31):
He just ignores them. He just ignores him. Did he
ignore him?

Speaker 2 (01:14:34):
He didn't ignore went back down more to go back
down to the district court. Now, this is about a
Maryland man who was, according to Chris van Holland, was
kidnapped by the country of l Salvador.

Speaker 5 (01:14:53):
Of course President Trump could have just said, you know,
bring him home. Of course he could have done that.
But this an administration that has lied about mister Brago Garcia, right,
the Vice President of the United States tweeted out that
he had a criminal record.

Speaker 24 (01:15:07):
That was a lie.

Speaker 3 (01:15:09):
They're just lying. They've gotten caught lining.

Speaker 5 (01:15:12):
They don't want to admit it, and they have an
obligation to bring him home. But I will say the
President of Al Salvador should not now take it upon
himself to say that he is detaining him for one
more day, because that is kidnapping. I understand that the
Attorney General said that we would provide a plane to
bring him home. So all the President of Al Salvador

(01:15:34):
has to do now is hand over and release an
innocent man and let him come home to his family.

Speaker 2 (01:15:41):
Well, first of all, America is not his home. You
could have a disdain for Trump and his policies. The
reality is this guy came here illegally and he's here.
Is he a gang member that hasn't been proven in
court yet, but he's still here legally, and he does
have orders to be removed. Those orders which the Trump

(01:16:03):
administration ignored, didn't see, didn't pay attention to. However you
want to look at it, those orders were deport not
to L.

Speaker 3 (01:16:15):
Salvador. Well, he got deported to L. Salvador.

Speaker 2 (01:16:18):
So, Chris van Hollands, Senator, he's going there because Bouquetla
wouldn't meet with him. Not a shocker, and he's going
to go get his man back, right right? Is he
really going there?

Speaker 6 (01:16:32):
Oh?

Speaker 24 (01:16:32):
He is.

Speaker 5 (01:16:33):
I'm here at the airport. I'm about to board my
flight for San Salvador. The goal of this mission is
to let the Trump administration, to let the government of
alf Salvador know that we are going to keep fighting
to bring Albrego Garcia home until he returns to his family.
I hope to meet with representatives of the government. I

(01:16:55):
hope to have the chance to actually see Kilmar and
see what his condition is. But we are going to
keep fighting because this is a miscarriage of justice. The
Supreme Court has ruled nine to zero, nine to zero
that he was illegally taken out of the country and
put in a prison in Al Salvador. And this is

(01:17:19):
about due process, This is about rule of law. What
bullies do is they begin by picking on the most vulnerable.

Speaker 3 (01:17:26):
But if we get rid of the rule of law.

Speaker 5 (01:17:28):
Due process the United States, it's a short road from
their to tyranny if we do.

Speaker 2 (01:17:35):
But we haven't, and it was nine zero not nine zero.
You need to return him in the way that they're
making it out to be. I'm going to go over
this again yesterday Alan Derschwitz talking about mister Garcia, and
I remind everybody this, I have to always do it.

(01:17:55):
I'm a rule of law person. There should have due process, Absolutely,
there should have. I'm not saying there can't be mistakes.
There will be mistakes, but there should be due process.
Because when you measure once twice and you and then
you decide, hey, we're going to measure maybe even a
third time and then you cut wow while lah, you

(01:18:17):
find out you don't have a lot of issues out there.

Speaker 8 (01:18:21):
Well, first of all, the court did not do a
particularly good job the Supreme Court. In order to get
to be nine to nothing, they had to compromise all
over the place. So they said, basically, look, the authority
lies with the foreign policy of the United States.

Speaker 3 (01:18:37):
Court shouldn't interfere with that.

Speaker 8 (01:18:39):
If he is going to come back, you should facilitate it.
But we're not going to have any deadlines. So the
Trump administration, stretching the opinion in its favor, says, well,
they didn't give us a deadline, and they didn't order
him to be brought back. They said facilitated. He shouldn't
be brought back. He should be given a hearing quickly

(01:19:02):
on the issue of whether he has a legitimate claim
of sanctuary, and then he should be sent back because
he's not a US citizen. Once you're not a US
citizen and you're here illegally, your rights are very very constraints.
This is not like the Khalil case where he's a
green cart. It's not even a student visa. You may
have a visa, but the question is if he came

(01:19:22):
ilegally in the beginning, he has no right to stay here,
accept subject to the humanitarian claim that if he sent back,
the gangs are going to kill him, that's his client.

Speaker 3 (01:19:32):
Seems pretty simple. Again, it wasn't nine to oh that
you must bring him back. It was nine ozho.

Speaker 2 (01:19:39):
We refer to the lower court, of which you have
to listen to. And the lower court is now pressing
they didn't hold them in contempt. I mean, they're moving
that direction. I'm not quite sure they know at this
moment in time exactly out of.

Speaker 3 (01:19:54):
The what the hell to do?

Speaker 14 (01:19:56):
Federal judge is giving the Trump administration two weeks to
hand over information on what it has or has not
done to comply with the Supreme Court's order to facilitate
the release of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, saying there will be
no tolerance for gamesmanship or grandstanding.

Speaker 3 (01:20:14):
Okay, So what exactly does that mean, Dan Abrams.

Speaker 23 (01:20:16):
What's interesting is the judge is basically saying, now you're
going to have to give us records, You're going to
have to testify under oath. There's going to be no
more just press conferences on this, no more broad proclamations.
I need to know the specifics of exactly what.

Speaker 2 (01:20:30):
You're doing, Okay, the specifics of what we're doing. You
need to know all of these things. Fantastic, So what
if we can't get him back there is that. That's
the other thing that the Supreme Court didn't want to do.
They didn't want to overstep their their area, right, you
got the executive, judicial, legislative. They didn't want to overstep

(01:20:55):
their area when it comes to dealing with foreign affairs.

Speaker 23 (01:21:02):
What if their arguments over privilege with regard to what
they have to testify to and don't And it goes
back to the Supreme Court and eventually comes back to
the judge and the judge finally says, you've got to
go ahead and do something with El Salvador. And they say, okay,
El Salvador wink wink, we'd like you to bring him back.
And they say we're good, We're not gonna do anything.
And then the administration says, well, we've tried. That becomes

(01:21:25):
an interesting question because now they can say we've asked,
they've said, no, what do you want us to do?

Speaker 2 (01:21:33):
Good question there. I don't know at that point in time.
I don't think anybody knows at that point what happens,
because you can't force a country to return somebody who
is not an American citizen, but as a citizen of
that country, who is in our country illegally.

Speaker 3 (01:21:55):
I what do you do? They said you had to facilitate.
We've asked, hell Bo Kayley was here, Well, you could
put pressure on him.

Speaker 2 (01:22:09):
Could you imagine for a second that the US says,
all right, we're gonna put all this pressure on now.
You could open up a Pandora's box of lawsuit after lawsuit.

Speaker 3 (01:22:24):
After lawsuit of if you need to bring this person.

Speaker 2 (01:22:28):
I mean to bring this person home, even if they
weren't involved in these flights. They insanity of this, the
unsanity of this, and of course the Democrats. First of all,
the media turns it into the biggest craziest thing of
all time. And then secondly they pick hills to die
on where you just sit there and go really like,
this is it? You canna turn this guy into a martyr.

(01:22:51):
And I've said for a long time the bigger pictures
due process. I've never said that he should stay or
he should go. I said, process.

Speaker 3 (01:23:02):
Is it.

Speaker 2 (01:23:02):
And yes, they did defy the orders and they sent
him somewhere, but it's not like they sent.

Speaker 3 (01:23:08):
Him you know.

Speaker 2 (01:23:09):
I at times have a bigger issue with them sending
him to Venezuela. The Venezuelans to El Salvador. But what
are you going to do? Some countries will not take people.
What about this guy? What if nobody will take him?
They bring him back and they're like, all right, well
you still have to leave. So you had to do
process and you already had orders to be removed. We
just can't send it El Salvador. So what now? Where

(01:23:32):
do we send you?

Speaker 30 (01:23:35):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (01:23:35):
Yeah, yeah, that's that's an interesting thing. Keep doing what
you're doing.

Speaker 6 (01:23:40):
Democrats, And I think the issue here is it's not
every Democrat, but a lot of Democrats, Democratic elected officials
and democratic activist types.

Speaker 3 (01:23:50):
And major donors hate Donald Trump. And I use that
word advisedly.

Speaker 6 (01:23:54):
I don't throw it around, but they hate him, and
they don't understand why everyone does. And I always say
to people, just because you hate him doesn't mean the
average voter who's a swing voter hates him. But they
view everything. When you hate someone, everything that person does
is viewed as a ten out of ten, the worst
thing since still in the blank. And when everything is

(01:24:15):
a mountain ball bills and you get into a boy
who Cried Wolfe situation, I'm throwing like a thousand cliches
at you, but the broader point of trying to make
your I just think he keeps getting them to fight
on his ground.

Speaker 3 (01:24:30):
And that's where he wins.

Speaker 2 (01:24:32):
And immigration is one of those places where the Republicans
have quite a big edge. You may be upset by
this for some people out there, but they're going to
be upset by anything he did with immigration, and that
is a place that the Democrats have fallen so many
damn times and continue to go and fight in his sandbox.

(01:24:54):
And he has set it up for you to fail.
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Speaker 9 (01:26:19):
Chad Benson Show, Chad Benson. No, it's time to find
out what's trending.

Speaker 2 (01:26:36):
What's trending James.

Speaker 26 (01:26:46):
Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Serena, what trupping?

Speaker 3 (01:27:02):
Let's fine?

Speaker 2 (01:27:02):
I was trending on the internets on this most festive
of Wednesdays.

Speaker 3 (01:27:06):
Is it really festive?

Speaker 11 (01:27:07):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (01:27:08):
Could be? Start with the Yahoo.

Speaker 2 (01:27:10):
Donald Trump number one training thing. The White House is
starting a new media policy that restricts wires service access
to the president. What El Salvador's prison, Seacott and a
number two Katie Perry MTG in her town hall. If
you guys didn't see that yesterday, Marjorie Taylor Green at

(01:27:31):
a town hall and there were several people removed and
one person got taste don't taste me bro.

Speaker 3 (01:27:36):
They did, oh, they did. Head over to magical world of.

Speaker 11 (01:27:48):
Google.

Speaker 2 (01:27:49):
Grizzlies Warriors, Dortmund Barcelona soccer soccer week.

Speaker 3 (01:27:54):
Martindale passed away yesterday. William Hutchins High.

Speaker 2 (01:27:59):
School of course, Alice for hurt in a shooting, Latitia James.
Trump administration refers New York ag Latitia James for possible
prosecution in a.

Speaker 3 (01:28:11):
Mortgage scam or delio or something.

Speaker 2 (01:28:15):
Who knows, not that there's any politics in that. Biden
gave a speech. Amanda Bindes, who has lost the plot
struggles I think with mental health. What a girl wants
a buch of other movies? She did kind of was
a kid star and then kind of went a little,
for lack of a better term, wacky.

Speaker 3 (01:28:37):
She's got an OnlyFans now, so it's not a good thing.
And finally, over to the magical world of Twitter.

Speaker 2 (01:28:44):
Supreme Court, Trump versus Old Salvadorian prisoner kidnapped.

Speaker 30 (01:28:49):
Three two three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three
at Chad Benson Show, is your ex your Instagram, YouTube,
and Facebook name a few.

Speaker 2 (01:29:01):
Check us out on YouTube, like and subscribe, appreciate when
you do. Helps us out right here on the Chad
Benson Show, Vance proposed rethinking of due process, Havid Carmelo,
Anthony not the basketball player, four Chan hacked tax Day.

Speaker 3 (01:29:25):
It's a few things trending in the magical world oh Twitter.

Speaker 2 (01:29:31):
The whole Marjorie Taylor Green thing last night was it
was interesting to say the least.

Speaker 3 (01:29:38):
Can I just say, And.

Speaker 2 (01:29:42):
Whether you like or don't like her, you guys know
how I feel about Marjorie Taylor Green.

Speaker 3 (01:29:45):
I mean, I.

Speaker 30 (01:29:46):
Think she's it's.

Speaker 3 (01:29:47):
All about her, There's no doubt about that.

Speaker 2 (01:29:51):
But not just Marjorie Taylor Green, but even Chuck Grassley yesterday.
The these things that we are seeing with the way
that people are reacting, and I think the fact that
we have some people out there that are completely not

(01:30:12):
stable these town halls, I'm waiting for somebody to really
twist off. I am Chuck Grassley, you know, and his
town hall. I mean even the Democrats, right, Like, the
people are pissed and they're showing up and they're getting
angry and mad. And we are seeing people now who

(01:30:33):
I think are you know, go look at what happened
over the weekend with Josh Shapiro, the governor in Pennsylvania.

Speaker 3 (01:30:41):
It feels like we are.

Speaker 2 (01:30:44):
Just at this moment of I'm lucky that something hasn't happened,
and that's a scary thing because I think it's going
to at some point in time.

Speaker 3 (01:30:55):
Missing the show, grab the podcast. It is The Chad Benson.

Speaker 10 (01:30:57):
Show, Son, Chad Benson, Joe.

Speaker 1 (01:31:22):
The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:31:25):
Yesterday, very fortunate to have about an hour Jason Whitlock.
We talked about all kinds of stuff, and if you
missed the first hour, we had a really good conversation
about fathers in America. The lack of fathers and male
role models in homes and particularly for young men is huge.
Some of the other stuff we got into that I

(01:31:46):
hit him up on is part of what it is
to be an American and how the rest of the
world is having some serious issues, and I'm talking about
the Western world and that if we don't we're going
to have some problems that they're starting to face. This

(01:32:06):
is some of my conversation with Jason yesterday. I lived
in Europe for a decade, and I was telling my
wife the other day I said, I wouldn't right now
feel like I could even go to a place like
the UK.

Speaker 3 (01:32:17):
First of all, because I've posted stuff. I'm sure we'd
get me in trouble.

Speaker 2 (01:32:20):
But it is become a different place and this insanity
of which I'm watching. I read a great article and
Telegraph the other day about the great diversity chase that
Sweden had that went completely wrong because it became about
you know, everybody coming here and live the life the
way that you used to live it. You don't have

(01:32:40):
to come in and be a part of Sweden. It
is falling apart and it is getting worse by the day,
and I feel like we're running at that because our
culture is not the rest of the world's culture. The
Western culture is much different and we better start paying
attention to what is happening out there.

Speaker 16 (01:32:57):
Chat I will say something really transparent, but I've been
saying it for the last three years. The first step
in defeating and making sure what's happened to the UK
doesn't happen to us. And I'm saying this not to
be divisive. I'm not saying this to be provocative. This
has been my message, the first step in it. White

(01:33:18):
men have to quit apologizing for being white men. White
men have to quit apologizing for America's history, because America's
history by the leftist has been unpacked in an unfair way.
And we have a terrific story in this country of
how white evangelical men built a constitution in a country

(01:33:42):
that made it possible to end slavery, made it possible
for black Americans to push for freedom and make America
live up to its best values, the values expressed in
the Declaration of Independence, the values of expressed in the Constitution.
If there weren't white evangelical men that established this country,

(01:34:05):
wrote that Declaration Dependence, wrote that Constitution, And if there
weren't black men and women fighting for freedom that forced
America to live up to those values, in the Constitution
and in the Declaration of Independence and in our Bill
of Rights, America would have never become the greatest country
in the history of the planet.

Speaker 3 (01:34:27):
Our story.

Speaker 16 (01:34:28):
Yes, does our story have some tragedy and some oppression
as a part of it, Yes, But our story here
in America is about black and white people trying to
have shared values, shared biblical values, and the freedom that
that produced and made us the envy of the world.

(01:34:50):
We need to, as men in general, we need to
quit apologizing for America's history, and we need to quit
apologizing for being men and wanting to be leaders, and
we need to stand up and for those of us
that have biblical values, we need to stand on what's
in that scripture because we understand that that Constitution was

(01:35:11):
based on a biblical worldview and taken straight from the Bible.
John Adams, one of our founding fathers, said, Hey, this
country and the way this Constitution was written was only
for a righteous and faith believing country. If we lose
our righteousness, if we lose our faith in God, this
country won't work for us. And so they're trying to

(01:35:33):
take the country away from us, from those of us
that have biblical values believe and understand this constitution and
have the proper perspective on what American greatness really look
like and how we got here, and quit apologizing. I'm
just telling because they get you on your heels and

(01:35:54):
the next thing, you know, you're afraid to stand on
what you believe.

Speaker 3 (01:35:57):
I don't let me called racious.

Speaker 16 (01:35:59):
I don't let me be called on I don't want
to be called this.

Speaker 3 (01:36:01):
I don't want to be called that.

Speaker 2 (01:36:02):
Talking to Jason Whitlock as we discuss all kinds of things,
and you know, as we're talking about Europe, obviously here
we've got a big immigration issue that has taken place.
I'm a big believer immigration. I think we're done right.
Is amazing.

Speaker 3 (01:36:16):
But as you brought up, you know, the world likes
to talk about how bad.

Speaker 2 (01:36:19):
America is, and you know Americans now, especially younger generation,
loves talk about how where the evil of the world.
The fact is everybody's trying to come here, and that's great.
But when you come here, I don't know about you, Jason,
when you come here, be American, soak up Americana, become

(01:36:39):
part of the fabric that is this country. I think
that's absolutely vital to a successful nation and a successful society.

Speaker 16 (01:36:50):
The reason I'm telling men to quite apologizing, American men
to quite apologizing, is because there's nothing wrong with any
man or a woman that's an American wanting people to
enter into our country and assimilate to American culture, American values,
the American way. Don't be ashamed, don't be fearful of

(01:37:15):
like oh no, because of diversity and multiculturalism, we need
to let people come in and bring their values and
their way of doing things from a foreign country and
let them set up shop here in America. Know we shouldn't,
and I want it. For those of you that have
never seen me, don't know who I am, I just

(01:37:37):
want to give you a brief description. Most people when
they see me, they're like, is that Denzel Washington? And
so I get stopped on the street all the time.
People think I'm Denzel Washington. So I just want to
be crystal clear that I look like Denzel Washington.

Speaker 3 (01:37:52):
And I don't know what I sound like.

Speaker 16 (01:37:53):
I probably sound like Jason Whitlock, a fat black guy,
but I look like Denzel Washington. And so when I'm
telling you not to be a shit, I know exactly
what I'm doing. And there's a justification and a reason
for it, because I've seen men bend at the threat
of being called racist, and now they back away and think, well,

(01:38:14):
in order for America to be successful, I need to
be welcoming and tolerant of values that are anti American.
And we can't do that. We can't allow that. This
is the greatest country in the history of the planet.
And as it relates to people like me that have
more melanin and look like Denzel Washington, America is the

(01:38:39):
safest place on the earth for black people. It's the
most prosperous place on the earth for black people. It's
the most opportunity rich place on the earth for black people.
And so all this complaining ah America is this, And
so no one wants to go anywhere. No one ever
picks up and leaves and moves to this other country

(01:39:00):
because they know it's not as good as America. And
they are the values that are founding fathers put into
place and build this country. Everybody in their real mind
knows that it works. We're looking at leftists and Marxists
try to undermine American values and create a very divided

(01:39:20):
country that's easier to fall easier to manipulate, easier to
fall into chaos, easier to impose a culture that's destructive,
anti family, anti children, less safe for children, children are
more vulnerable. And if we as Americans don't realize what

(01:39:41):
we have and what they establish is worth preserving and
worth making people uncomfortable by saying not that man. You
can come in this country, but you're going to be American.
You're going to adopt. We love free speech over here.
We're not giving it up to make someone else's feelings
not get hurt.

Speaker 3 (01:39:59):
Amen.

Speaker 16 (01:40:00):
We got thick enough skin, and those of us with
a biblical worldview is like, I don't know if people
realize this, but Black Christians in the eighteen sixties they
had a newspaper and they coined the phrase sticks and
stones may break my bones with words, will never harm me.
That came from a Black Christian newspaper, that saying and
fly and it was because Black Christians used to fully

(01:40:22):
understand only God's opinion of me matters. So I couldn't
care less what some bigoted person thinks about me, because
it doesn't matter. Only God's opinion of me matters. And
so unless you're throwing sticks and stones at me. I
don't care what you call me. As we become more
secular and move away from that worldview, and the Marxists

(01:40:46):
come in and say, oh, microaggressions. Oh you experienced a
microaggression and you must respond to that very aggressively and emotionally.
We got to cut it out. We got to get
back to what made America great. Male leadership, male innovation,
proper roles between men and women. Men have men invited

(01:41:11):
flying the right brothers. It wasn't the right sisters. Men
took sticks of dynamites and blue holes through mountains so
that we can have paid roles and travel these places.
And I'm not saying women played their role. And women
are very important. You can't have life without women. You
can't replenish the earth without women. Women are awesome. But

(01:41:33):
we're kidding ourselves, pretending like men have been this incredible
evil force against all of humanity and we owe women
this great debt. We don't. Our lifespans are shorter than
women because we take all or most of the risks.
We sacrifice our lives to protect women and children. Chad,

(01:41:54):
I think there's a stat that eighty three percent of
the women on the Titanic survived and only seventeen percent
of the men did. And that's because men chose death
to protect women. And so that's the nineteen thirteen, nineteen twelves,
when men were in their proper mindset and we knew

(01:42:14):
what our job was.

Speaker 2 (01:42:16):
That was some of our conversation we had yesterday with
Jason Whitlock. We're going to post the full podcast. It
was an interesting conversation. We were all over the place
talking about religion, talking about men.

Speaker 3 (01:42:29):
I mean, you heard it. It is fascinating.

Speaker 2 (01:42:31):
Some people they get mad at him, right they see
him and they think, oh, he's a black conservative and
he's like But others.

Speaker 3 (01:42:39):
Right minded normal folk go, you know what.

Speaker 2 (01:42:43):
I think a lot of what he has to say
really hits home, especially when it comes to men and
the lack of fathers in the home. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four twenty three at Chad Benson's show,
That is your X, that is your Instagram, your Facebook,

(01:43:04):
and yes, check us out on YouTube. Every night about
eight o'clock Eastern we go live, so if you have
a chance to check us out, if not, you can
catch the video. We talk about a lot of different things,
some stuff we can get into deeper details and sometimes
there may be a bad word here there and just
putting that out to you. You can check that out
at Chad Benson Show on YouTube. Helps us out right

(01:43:27):
here on the Chad Benson Show. Roughgreensreuffgreens dot com, vitamins, minerals,
probiotics and make a three six nine all that stuff.
You hear me talk about that all the time. Let
skip to the good stuff, Chad. How about a free
bag jump Start trial bag twenty dollar value. You get
to absolute free, cover the costs of shipping. Now, now
that you got it, one scoop a day keeps the
bed away.

Speaker 3 (01:43:45):
Why do I say that?

Speaker 2 (01:43:46):
Take the ninety day challenge with rough Greens and find
out it is going to help your dog in ways
you cannot believe. The health of your dog, just like
for me, is very important and the ninety day challenge,
You're going to see your dog become more energetic, thicker,
shinier coat, skin is gonna be better, digestive track, immune system,

(01:44:08):
heart health.

Speaker 3 (01:44:08):
I can go on and on.

Speaker 2 (01:44:10):
Try a Jumpstart trialbag of rough Greens for free and
take the ninety day challenge and watch what happens It
is awesome. Are you ff Greens dot com? Use my code, Chad,
get that twenty dollars jumpstart trial bag for free. You
cover the costs of shipping and take the ninety day
challenge Roughgreens dot Com. Use code Chad. We're gonna wrap

(01:44:31):
it up straight. Add on this Wednesday Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:44:44):
If you like Duk Radio, like Chad Benson likes his meals,
You've come to the perfect place for takeout.

Speaker 14 (01:44:51):
First the Burkins being sold o live now there giving
tutorials on how to get your stuff shipped from China
straight to your door.

Speaker 11 (01:45:00):
Apes.

Speaker 18 (01:45:02):
Oh, she's excited. Get your stuff shipped immediately to your
house from China. Avoid the battle of tariffs. Are we
spending more money? That is a great question, Chad. What
do retail sales say?

Speaker 31 (01:45:20):
In fact, SEA analysts, concerned over US trade policies, is
likely sending more consumers into the marketplace before new tariffs
on imported goods take effect. The Census Bureau says it's
advanced estimate on retail sales in March show a dramatic
one point four percent increase from the previous month. At
a massive four point six percent search from March of
twenty twenty four.

Speaker 3 (01:45:40):
Woooo, what's it look like next month? I couldn't tell you.
I couldn't tell you it looks like on any month.

Speaker 2 (01:45:47):
What I do know is confidence consumer wise, which is
very important, is down. I hope people understand that we're
a little nervous. As Trumpet's eight, we're a bit yippie
and that's not yippy Kia. So there's understandably some worries,
if that makes sense.

Speaker 3 (01:46:08):
Do I think we're going to be okay?

Speaker 2 (01:46:09):
I do believe we're going to be fine, but it
is going to be a situation where because of tariffs
and the uncertainty. And I think the biggest thing isn't
the tariffs at this moment in time, it's the uncertainty
we as a nation, despite what a lot of people think.
I think we can adjust. I think we're capable of adjusting.

(01:46:35):
But it's hard to adjust to uncertainty because it's uncertain.
If you tell me that prices from the stuff that
I purchase right now, some of it made in China,
not all of it, are going to cost fifteen to
thirty percent more, I can adjust to that accordingly. But

(01:46:55):
if you tell me maybe seventy percent more maybe not.
Maybe stuff you buy from other countries maybe a little
bit more, maybe not. Maybe the stuff that you would
like to purchase, you're not going to be able to get,
at least not in a timely fashion. That's what makes

(01:47:15):
it hard for people to adjust to and to get comfortable.
We will reset ourselves. We do have a short attention span.
We do get frustrated. If you know, I read an
article the other day that most people panic or start
to have phone anxiety when their battery gets to like

(01:47:39):
thirty eight percent.

Speaker 18 (01:47:40):
They're like, oh.

Speaker 2 (01:47:41):
God, I'm saying that because even though we at times
can be a little over traumatic, we can panic a
little bit. We get frustrated when the TikTok's too long.
My uncle and I were talking about that last night.
Our attention span is virtually none. I mean, if the

(01:48:04):
TikTok doesn't tell me what I want in the first
ten seconds, I'm moving on.

Speaker 3 (01:48:09):
Even though all of those things are there.

Speaker 2 (01:48:13):
When push comes to shove and we have to come
together and do something, I have no doubt in my
mind we can do it because we don't have a choice.
We may grumble and bitch, but we wouldn't have a choice.
Right now, we don't know what's happening, and because of that,
the anxiety is we don't know what's happening, so we

(01:48:35):
don't know where to go or how to feel. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four, twenty three at Shed Benson Show.
That's your ex Gonna give it to you as well
as your Insta, Facebook, and of course you YouTube like
and subscribe.

Speaker 3 (01:48:49):
Tonight about eight o'clock we're gonna be live.

Speaker 2 (01:48:52):
So if you have a chance, tune in for that
fun talk about a lot of different things, get a
little bit more in depth, appreciate that. Right here on
the Chad Benson Show, solid fun show today, we got
you over the hump. Never mind, everybody, if you miss
any of the interview with Jason Whitlock. We did it yesterday.
It is about an hour. It's a it's a good interview.

(01:49:15):
And again, you don't have to like what he has
to say. You can disagree with some stuff. I love
the fact that we do that on our show. I
feel like we have a platform where we can have
a disagreement without being so angry at each other.

Speaker 3 (01:49:28):
That's what I pride ourselves on here.

Speaker 2 (01:49:30):
You guys out there, Yes, you, and you and you
join me tonight about eight o'clock Eastern on YouTube, X, Insta,
all the other things.

Speaker 3 (01:49:38):
Have a blessed rest of your day. We got you
over the hump. As always, not not Jack.

Speaker 1 (01:49:45):
This is the Chad Benson Show.
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