Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
The left still doesn't get it. I don't expect them to.
They are tone deaf. And by that I mean the elites.
I'm not talking about the average Democrat, all right. When
I say the left, I mean progressive wackadoo's media types, intellectuals.
You know academia better than you. They don't get it.
They remind me on a daily basis of the person
(00:38):
that wants to pet the polar Bear because it saw
a Christmas commercial where it was sliding down a hill
holding a diet coke and it thinks it's that polar Bear,
and they think this polar bear is going to know
(00:59):
I'm a good person. Then I didn't vote for Donald
Trump and I'm a vegan, and then the polar bear says,
oh my god, lunch is here. Because they're idiots. They're naive,
they are, and that's sad. This entire administration is nothing
(01:21):
but that they are bending over backwards to make sure
that everybody knows this guy is a homegrown terrorist. It's
not about that. It's not about that at all. It's
about the influence that so much of the Western world
(01:46):
is seeing when it comes to radical Islam.
Speaker 3 (01:52):
Is having on the Western world.
Speaker 2 (01:58):
And for the liberal governments who've allowed it to spread
and who won't be honest about what's happening. We're and
I count us as part of that because of our
open border policy, and by that I mean this administration's
open border policy.
Speaker 3 (02:18):
We're the ones who are gonna get bit in the
ass my orchis.
Speaker 4 (02:22):
So this does appear to be an individual, a US citizen,
radicalized to violence by a foreign terrorist ideology, specifically the
ISIS ideology. This is a phenomenon, a phenomenon of homegrown
violent extremists that we have seen develop and emerge over
(02:43):
the past ten years.
Speaker 2 (02:46):
Okay, so where did he get that ideology? Just out
of curios? But they're bending over back. Wasn't to make
everybody just know that this guy's homegrown? Yeah, of course,
you know, we get it. He was born here, raised here.
But he's parrist And it's just like Timothy McVeigh. It's
like settle down right. Not quite the ideology, by the way,
(03:08):
Timmy McVeigh was awful. It's a horrible human being. And
I'm not saying there's not people that are extremists and
Luna Tunes that are living off grid ready for a revolution.
But come on now, stop being the person that wants
to pet the polar bear because you think the polar
bear is gonna like you.
Speaker 4 (03:27):
The isis goal is to have Americans live in fear,
and we cannot allow them to succeed in that. Regard
our democracy, our way of life must prevail. We will
continue to enjoy and flourish in our democratic way of
life and not allow an atmosphere of fear to prevail,
(03:52):
and therefore have Isis's goal succeed well.
Speaker 2 (03:56):
Is isis an American? Is this an American thing? No, no,
it's not. And I'll reiterate this, and some of you
got mad at me yesterday and somebody said, you know,
I never thought of it like that. I think this
guy's radicalization happened fast because I think he was a
miserable soop finding out how he had three ex wives,
he was broke af even though at one point in
time he had made a decent amount of money. He
(04:16):
had also had several girlfriends. He he was he had
lost the freaking plot and was angry and pissed at
the world, and he was easily radicalized. Now how that
happened is the question. That people are asking and how
did it happen so fast? I think he was you know,
I think I said yesterday, I said that Harry Christnans
(04:37):
would have got to him. He might have done that.
Instead of driving into a bunch of people and smashing
and killing them in the name of Isis, he'd be
at the damn airport with a wacky haircut, handing out pamphlets,
trying to get a buck. He hated the world an
Isis gave him, or al Kader, whoever it was that
they spoke to him, gave him a sense of well,
(05:00):
you guys are you know you're offering me something I
don't have here and the rest of the world owes
me and baba. But the thought of hey, you know what,
this guy was just like Timothy McVay. It's like what
I He wasn't, No, he wasn't. Timothy Vay was awful.
It's horrible pos a vile individual who killed innocent people.
(05:28):
That's the only thing they have in common. But that's
where everybody. Oh. Then last night, Lawrence o'donald's still on
television on MSNBC once to again, just like everybody else
in the administration on the left obviously, and the the
people in the media still pushing it's it's you're just
(05:51):
tone deaf.
Speaker 3 (05:53):
You're tone deaf. This should be a wake up call.
Speaker 2 (05:58):
The wake up call is we've allowed god knows how
many people in here, many of them who want nothing
to do with the American way of life, hate everything
the West stands for. But you want to make sure that, Hey,
I'm one of the good ones. Look at me, one
(06:20):
of the good ones. Yeah, Laurence O'Donnell.
Speaker 5 (06:25):
First, there was Timothy McVay, an American military veteran who
killed one hundred and sixty eight people, including nineteen children,
and a terrorist attack on a federal building in Oklahoma City.
Timothy McVay parked a truck outside that building loaded with
explosives in an act of home grown American terrorism. Timothy
(06:51):
mcvay's hatred of the American government was not tamed in
any way by his service in the American military. So
too with America's latest terrorist attack in New Orleans under
Year's Eve, with an American military veteran driving a pickup
truck through a crowd to murder fourteen people. The American
(07:14):
military veteran terrorist was then killed and an exchange of
gunfire with police.
Speaker 3 (07:22):
Okay, you see where he's going with this. They're the same.
Speaker 2 (07:26):
It's really the military's fault. It's nothing to do with
the border being wide open. These people are useful idiots.
They're the people that even as they're being tossed off
the building, holding their rainbow flags, saying, you know, queers
for Palestine or whatever. If these people, you know, that
would love to destroy America and the West got their way,
(07:48):
they would still be on the way down going.
Speaker 3 (07:50):
I think we did the right thing. I think they'll learn.
Speaker 5 (07:54):
But when Donald Trump sees the type of terrorist attack
that occurred in New Orleans, he doesn't remember Timothy mcfah
and instead he blames the criminals that he imagines are
crossing the southern border. Hours after the attack of New Orleans,
Donald Trump wrote, quote when I said that the criminals
coming in are far worse than the criminals we have
(08:16):
in our country. That statement was constantly refuted by Democrats
and the fake news media, but it turned out to
be true. No one has ever, who has ever crossed
the Southern border in the history of the existence of
the Southern border has killed more people in this country
(08:40):
than Timothy McVeigh, who was born in Lockport, New York,
the northwest part of the state, into a white Roman
Catholic American family with roots in this country that go
back farther than Donald Trump's roots in this country.
Speaker 2 (08:58):
They just don't get it. This is why you lost.
The border's wide open. What about Trinte Agua? What about
MS thirteen, what about all of the carts? What about
You don't think those are people that are bad dudes?
Know again, they're not. They're saints. But let's take them
out of it, because that's just run of the mill
(09:18):
criminal stuff. You mean to tell me that out of
the two million got aways and I'm not even talking
about the amount of people that have been detected at
the ports that are known and wanted terrorists, You mean
(09:40):
to tell me that the two million gotaways, there's nobody
that wants to do damage. They could open up fire
today in every major city and tomorrow MSNBC would lead
with They're not as bad as Timothy McVeigh. They're not
this want too for whatever reason, side with people whose
(10:05):
ideology is absolutely diametrically opposed to anything they believe in,
but because they think it's well, it's white supremacy.
Speaker 3 (10:15):
If you don't, it's nationalism. If you don't, it just
it boggles the mind.
Speaker 2 (10:24):
And it shouldn't.
Speaker 3 (10:25):
This is why you lost the.
Speaker 5 (10:26):
New Orleans Terrorists like Timothy McVay reached the rank of
sergeant in the United States Army. The simple fact is
this country has suffered more deadly terrorism at the hands
of American born citizens who are veterans of the United
States Military than people who have crossed into this country.
Speaker 3 (10:52):
At the southern border.
Speaker 5 (10:53):
It is very clear from the evidence that if you
want to worry about terrorism in this country, the United States,
this army is a much bigger problem than on the
southern border. No one across the southern border attacked the
Capitol on January sixth, four years ago, but several veterans
of the United States Military violently attacked the capital on
(11:15):
January sixth and an act of terrorism intended to terrorize
Congress into violating the Constitution and not certifying Joe Biden
as the elected president of the United States.
Speaker 3 (11:27):
They just they live for this stuff, right, It's bizarre.
Speaker 2 (11:32):
Well, keep living in your dream world, my god, because
when and if something happens, and it will, then what
just out of curiosity, then what.
Speaker 3 (11:47):
They'll figure out a way to make it about.
Speaker 2 (11:48):
January sixth, Timothy mcveay and White Folk three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson
Show is your Twitter tweet at his text the program.
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Speaker 1 (13:09):
Chad Benson without the game is back on for today.
Speaker 4 (13:13):
But I'm not surprised because the spirit of Orleans can
never be kept down.
Speaker 3 (13:18):
And that's also true of the spirit of America. Just
remember who we are.
Speaker 2 (13:22):
Who are we or are you talking to you? It's
probably Biden's like, we just have to remember who we are.
I am Mikaan, you're Batman. There was a game yesterday
in New Orleans. The Sugar Bowl was back on. They
opened up Bourbon Street too, which.
Speaker 3 (13:37):
Is I get that.
Speaker 2 (13:42):
You wanted to get Bourbon Street up and running as
fast as possible. I get that. I think we all
get that. It just felt like maybe another day or two.
That's all I mean, because it's still to me, it's
just like you just walking over an active crime scene.
Speaker 6 (14:03):
In the day after the terror attack, law enforcers from
various agencies nearly outnumber the tourists in the French quarter
at Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry observed.
Speaker 7 (14:11):
Right now, this is one of the safest places on Earth.
Speaker 6 (14:13):
Thursday night, the public took him at his word, and
the knightly street party that is the French Quarter resumed.
Speaker 2 (14:20):
Well, there's no doubt it was, you know, absolutely safe
because they're not coming back. This isn't gonna happen again.
Not then. I mean, it's just it wasn't. I think
everybody recognizes that. That's the same thing that went on,
you know that the Sugar Bowl. It was, Yeah, that
was a safe place to be. But it's not about
(14:40):
the place itself, like the Sugar Bowl or the super
Bowl coming up. It's the perimeter and outside of that
perimeter because those are the soft, easy targets. Sure that
mile into what will be the Super Bowl or the
Sugar Bowl.
Speaker 8 (15:01):
Last night, bomb sniffing dogs, sweeping vehicles, police and tactical
gear at the gates, Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry promising an
unprecedented law enforcement presence to protect the tens of thousands
of fans who came to New Orleans and extended their
stays to support their teams.
Speaker 2 (15:19):
And that's awesome, right that they did that, and they
got in there and they had the game.
Speaker 3 (15:23):
And I'll talk about that in a second, but.
Speaker 2 (15:28):
It's the outside at the you know, outside of the
stadiums of the soccer game, almost with the Heiress Tour.
Speaker 3 (15:37):
It's the outside.
Speaker 2 (15:40):
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson shows your Twitter tweet at his
text the program right here on the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 3 (15:51):
Meanwhile, there was a game last night and Georgia got
served by the fighting Irish. I say, here's a kick
to start hat.
Speaker 9 (16:00):
Jaden Harrison, make it a chance here, gonna bring it
out from his own two yard line, cuts it inside,
takes it out to the car, slight across the numbers,
hold on the car sideline.
Speaker 10 (16:08):
Jane Harrison hit the.
Speaker 3 (16:09):
Chats across bigfield forty thirty.
Speaker 2 (16:13):
Tway ten hits a touchdown kickoff return from Jandon Harrison.
Speaker 3 (16:20):
He waited all season long.
Speaker 11 (16:23):
Thank god, it is thy fame.
Speaker 3 (16:26):
Yeah, they put it away. Georgia didn't look very good.
Speaker 2 (16:28):
Their starting quarterback was injured and hadn't played, and they
just they just didn't look good at all. And Notre
Dame scored I think it was seventeen points in like
twenty five seconds or something like that. They kicked a
field goal, then after the kickoff they got the fumble,
uft the first play, then scored a touchdown, then took
(16:52):
the kickoff start the second half and scored that touchdown.
So they're gonna take on Penn's State and then you've
got Ohio State and Texas and I will be giving
you my picks for who will win. One thing I
did know, and I said it again, if you got
to buy in the first round in the college football playoffs,
(17:14):
you are zero and four those teams are. If you're
missing the show, grab the podcast Happy Friday. It's Chad Benson.
Speaker 12 (17:20):
Show, Son, Chad Benson, Joe.
Speaker 1 (18:00):
The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (18:02):
Last year. Just the other day, it's the year of unionizing.
And I just found this interesting. I saw this the
other day and because of what took place with the
horror attack. Did you say horror attack, No, a horror
different attack in Nola, I put it off.
Speaker 3 (18:22):
But this is a Starbucks.
Speaker 2 (18:26):
Employee because you know they went on strike right around Christmas.
And I just want you to listen to him because
it fascinates me the thought process of people. Let's just
say in this industry, in the fast food industry.
Speaker 9 (18:45):
I have a white.
Speaker 5 (18:47):
And son at home or a single income households.
Speaker 13 (18:52):
Making sure that we have a contract that people have
been not only survive offer but also fry pop up.
Speaker 7 (19:02):
This really important to me, especially having a kid.
Speaker 2 (19:05):
I want to build a future.
Speaker 14 (19:07):
That I can be proud for him to inherit.
Speaker 3 (19:12):
And there's a lot that I can't control in that respect.
Speaker 7 (19:16):
This is something I can control, and this is something
I can push.
Speaker 3 (19:19):
So that's why I'm in this person.
Speaker 2 (19:22):
Okay, let's just unpack this. First, why are you a
single family income on a Starbucks not salary but wage. Secondly,
you're an idiot if you think you deserve some sort
of one hundred thousand dollars a year to make coffee.
Sounds about right. I want my kids to be able
to look up and be proud. No, you're working at Starbucks. Bro.
(19:45):
This was if you want to be a manager. Okay, right,
because I'm sure they make good money. In fact, let's
look that up, right, let's chat. Let's check and see
what a Starbucks manager makes. Because I don't know, I
could be wrong. Uh, how muh does a stunt? And
by the way, I am using Ai. It is a
(20:06):
beta test that we're working on, uncle, and I let's
just take it a little quick peak here. Okay, here
we go forty five to fifty five per year, starting
out with bonuses between two to five thousand annually or
more depending on store performance and company wide results. So
let's make sixty grand a year. You work at a Starbucks.
(20:28):
You're a barista. It's not my fault. You got a
gender humanity study degree, and this is where you're stuck.
But the thought that, uh, I want my kids to
be proud of me, I am thinking no, they may
think you're a great guy, and I hope they do.
And you're there for your kid, fantastic, But you're you
work at a Starbucks. You're a one income household. This
(20:52):
was never meant to be a career being a barista. Okay,
just putting that out there. I just found it fascinating,
just the it's tone deaf. Am I am I wrong?
Am I am I bad person? Oh yeah, Jed, you're
a horrible person. Person should absolutely be able to make
a gazillion dollars work against Starbucks. If the person if
(21:16):
you left today and they hired somebody new tomorrow and
within a few days they could do what you were doing.
Chances are you're not gonna get paid that much now
if you want again, if you want to go be
a manager, general manager, all those kinds of things. That's
a career at that point in time. The barista, I
don't think was ever meant to be a career. Three two, three, five,
(21:39):
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chat Benson Show,
it's your twittered tweet at his text the program al
key Hall is bad for ye. And there's a new
warning out from the Surgeent General about alcohol and cancer.
Speaker 15 (21:57):
No amount of alcohol is really recommended for your health.
And that really goes against the suggestions we've been hearing
since the nineties that maybe alcohol, at least in moderation,
maybe red wine, maybe it's good for you. Increasingly that's
been going in the opposite direction, and so today the
US Surgeon General is issuing this advisory, noting that alcohol
is the third leading preventable cause of cancer in the
(22:19):
United States, after tobacco and obesity, and notes that even
though this scientific research has been emerging, a majority of
Americans actually don't realize that risk between alcohol and cancer.
Speaker 2 (22:33):
So there is a link between alcohol and cancer. Now,
I think a lot of people thought were your kidneys
and your liver? I could see that, but no, what
they're saying is alcohol in general is going to raise
the possibility of you getting some cancers.
Speaker 15 (22:52):
In their release, they're noting that alcohol consumption increases the
risk of at least seven different types of cancer, and
as part of this advisory, the Surgeon General is also
calling for an update to the health warning labels on
alcoholic beverages to include this link to cancer. He notes
that there are one hundred thousand cases and twenty thousand
(23:13):
deaths associated with cancer that are linked to alcohol in
the United States every years.
Speaker 2 (23:20):
That's a lot. I mean, they're putting it third between,
you know, behind smoking and obesity. So here here's the
thing though, when you look at it is smoking. Also
a lot of people who drink smoke, drink heavily I'm
talking about, and usually they're not in the best condition.
Is the possibility that there is some the correlation and
(23:42):
causation if you will of this, hmm, that's a possibility
as well. And remind everybody, I am a tee totaler.
I don't drink, I don't smoke. I don't do drugs.
I'm a tee, totaler bite. I'llout do anything of never
ady drink of, never smoked of Devdati drug.
Speaker 3 (23:57):
You can go ahead and do those. I've got zero
brams with that.
Speaker 2 (24:00):
Thinks adult should be able to make your own decisions,
but we should recognize that there may be risk.
Speaker 3 (24:04):
But there's risk with everything, and what do they always
say in motivation?
Speaker 15 (24:07):
So those seven different types of cancer that have the
link to alcohol consumption are breast cancer, colarectal cancer, esophagus cancer,
liver mouth, throat and voice box cancer. He notes that
more than sixteen percent of breast cancer cases are attributable
to alcohol consumption. Sarah, So this is something that's trying
to raise awareness, to make sure that folks know about
(24:30):
this link where the scientific evidence has been going for
some time.
Speaker 3 (24:33):
Yeah, well but I still I bet you I could.
Speaker 2 (24:37):
And there's probably an argument in there that when you
look and see that many people, it's probably not that
person that has a class of wine every now and then.
It's probably heavy drinkers, people who drink, or at least
people who drink on a very regular basis more than
just again a glass of wine, and chances are their
diets not pretty good? And they probably have it one
(25:00):
time smoked or may continue to smoke. So there's a
whole bunch that probably revolves around this. So it's probably
not as simple as that. But it's alcohol. I mean,
it's meant for you to take the edge off. It's
meant to, you know, maybe at times, get you a
little bit happier or angrier. Nobody likes an angry junk Todd?
(25:24):
Who's Dodd? I don't know? Putting it out there? Are
they gonna have to have warnings? Aren't the warnings on everything?
Is there already warnings on alcohol? There is right and
tells you how much alcohols, and there also tells you
I love that too when they put and if you're
an alcoholic, call this number if you need help. Is
that ever? Is that leg ever worked? Has somebody ever
(25:47):
been drinking a beer? I just I can't do it anymore?
What's this? Stay in the bottle? Call the SnO? Okay?
Has that ever worked? No? It's hugely when you're in
the gutter somewhere and you realize, oh, I can't do
that anymore.
Speaker 3 (26:01):
Ah, this is not a good thing. Three two, three, five,
three eight twenty four to twenty three.
Speaker 2 (26:06):
At Shed Benson Show, Thure, Twitter, your Instagram, all of
the other things, of course, the YouTube, and and come Monday,
there's gonna be a lot more video and stuff. We
were actually planning to come back Monday. We came back
a little bit earlier because of the attack in the
whole nine yards, so we're actually coming back on Monday.
Speaker 3 (26:23):
So we're in the ground running for.
Speaker 2 (26:27):
Monday, where you're gonna see a lot more video, a
lot of other stuff. So we try to take it
behind the scenes and have fun doing you know, our
show and what it's like to be a part of
the radio industry, but also my thoughts in a in
a little bit more raw way.
Speaker 3 (26:42):
I think it's a good way to put it.
Speaker 2 (26:44):
You're not quite there yet with radio, or we're not
quite there yet. Or if somebody says a bad word,
somebody goes somebody said a bad word and I've never
heard one before. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty
four twenty three at Shed Benson Show, To Twitter, your Instagram,
coming up, a lot of stuff still to get to,
some entertainment stuff. Fun next hour, we're gonna have more
(27:06):
on New Orleans and the chaos and craziness of the
left trying to once again fit things into narratives that
shouldn't be. And also we're gonna talk a little bit
about what's going on in Britain, and if you've not
paid attention to what's happening in Britain. In the UK,
there is a scandal out there about grooming and young
(27:29):
girls being raped that was known swept under the rug
and has been brought out again and people are starting
to ask serious questions. It is a scandalous they would
say three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to
twenty three at Chat Benson Show, Twitter, Roughgreens areuffgreens dot
com slash chat. So do you got a rough greens
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It was back in with my eldest in Arizona that
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Speaker 3 (28:39):
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Speaker 16 (28:55):
Chad Benson, Joe Irreverence.
Speaker 1 (29:07):
I'm like, yeah, so what it's the Chat Benson Show.
Speaker 17 (29:12):
Next up? Squidgame, the hit show return last week for
a second season. The shocking series shattering Netflix records. It's
skyrocketed to the top of the Netflix Global Top ten
thanks to its sixty eight million views, plus, the series
is now number one in a whopping ninety two country.
Season two even broke the record for most views for
(29:33):
a show in its premiere week. No surprise, Season three
already given the green light Netflix, revealing in a teaser
video the next installment is just around the corner, slated.
Speaker 1 (29:43):
To arrive this year.
Speaker 2 (29:44):
Just around the corner, slated to arrive this year because
when it's hot. I have not seen Squid Games. The
kids all rave about it, but I'm really into land
Man right now. If you guys have not seen land Man,
Billy Bob Thornton, great show right there. That's a that's
another tailor Sheridan vehicles, they would say in the industry,
(30:09):
Billy Bob's amazing old cast is awesome.
Speaker 3 (30:12):
If you have not seen land Mat, that's great.
Speaker 2 (30:13):
But now I've not seen this.
Speaker 3 (30:16):
I've not seen the Squid Games. I've seen the excitement
because the kids are like, aw about got squid guy
Guy's back.
Speaker 2 (30:23):
I'm like, cool, cool, but I've not seen it.
Speaker 3 (30:27):
But it's huge. I mean it's.
Speaker 2 (30:29):
Massive, and so what they did, because I didn't think
the first one was going to be that kind of
hit worldwide, So what they ended up doing is once
I knew it was a big hit. And this is
the issue with as cool as it is that we
have all these independent, you know, opportunities and getting stuff
from all over the world, and and you know, the
(30:50):
media and entertainment like we've never had before. The issue
with stuff like Netflix and a lot of these other things.
Speaker 3 (30:57):
Is they're limited series.
Speaker 2 (31:01):
So it's like with Stranger Things talked about yesterday. I mean,
at what point you know, no, Billie Bobby Brown, she
is lily like she's fourteen. Just let you guys know.
So because they do, you know it, it takes forever
to get these things done, and you don't know when
it is that you're gonna get the next installment. So
(31:21):
when they said we're shooting season two, we're gonna go
straight into it and shoot season three.
Speaker 3 (31:27):
I remember, was it Back to the Future?
Speaker 2 (31:31):
Perfect example, Zi Metkis when they did Back to the Future
two and three, they shot him simultaneously like they were
shooting one. Once they finished one, they said, are we
gonna do sequel and we're gonna do another one. We're
gonna do those two together, so they were filming them. Essentially,
you come over here today and Michael J. Fox, Marty
(31:54):
Fly make over here and do a scene for part two.
And then the next day Doc Brown's doing a scene
for part two and Martnink flies over there in the
on the western one doing a scene for part three
because they shot him simultaneously. Where sometimes these things seem
to take for freaking ever forever.
Speaker 3 (32:12):
Baby Uh.
Speaker 2 (32:14):
Speaking of the entertainment industry, if you're not falling, what's
going on with the whole Blake Lively thing. It is crazy.
So her and her co star, she directed this movie.
It's a big hit.
Speaker 3 (32:32):
They had, as the kids would say, beef.
Speaker 2 (32:37):
And it got ugly, and they didn't even you know,
they didn't even go out and promote the movie together.
And then the New York Times did this like super
like op ed thing that was like, oh my god,
she's amazing stuff. And then it's now gone to the
point where he's suing the New York Times, and this
is all about reputation at this point in time.
Speaker 18 (32:55):
Tonight, Justin Beldannie's lawyer speaking out for the first time
since Blake Lively accus the actor of unprofessional and sexually
inappropriate behavior on the set of It Ends with Us
and a coordinated smear campaign to damage her reputation?
Speaker 15 (33:08):
Was there a coordinated smear campaign to bring down Blake Lively?
Speaker 12 (33:12):
No.
Speaker 18 (33:12):
Lively is filed a civil rights complaint and a lawsuit
against her co star, who also directed the film, where
she claims that, in retaliation for raising concerns, Baldannie and
his team launched an online social manipulation campaign to destroy
Lively's reputation. The New York Times published the first story
about Lively's allegations. Now, Baldonnie and nine other plaintiffs, including
bal Donnie's PR firm, are suing the paper for libel
(33:34):
and say they plan to take further legal action.
Speaker 2 (33:38):
And the lady that wrote the piece in the New
York Times is like the lady who spearheaded the me
too movement in the journalism world.
Speaker 3 (33:46):
And this dude.
Speaker 2 (33:50):
As as also the children would say the youngsters has
receipts because they posted a bunch of text messages. But
maybe they weren't all of the text messages. Maybe stuff
was deleted even in the middle of said text messages.
Maybe there were lies.
Speaker 1 (34:07):
Do you plan to sue Blake Lively?
Speaker 3 (34:09):
Absolutely? You will, Yes, in the filing.
Speaker 18 (34:12):
Beal Donnie's lawyers contend text messages we're taken out of
context or exclude it, including one appearing to show Lively
inviting bal Donnie into her trailer while pumping, which they
say refutes Lively's claim that Baldonnie would enter her trailer
uninvited while she was undressed, including when she was breastfeeding.
Speaker 5 (34:28):
We plan to release every single text messages between the
two of them.
Speaker 3 (34:33):
We want the truth to be out there.
Speaker 1 (34:34):
We want the documents to be out there.
Speaker 5 (34:36):
We want people to make their determination based on receipts.
Speaker 18 (34:40):
In a statement, the New York Times stood by its
reporting and said we planned to vigorously defend against the lawsuit.
A lawyer for Lively said nothing in this lawsuit changes
anything about the claims and her complaints. Well, Lively previously said,
I hope that my legal action helps pull back the
curtain on these sinister retaliatory tactics to harm people who
speak up about misconduct.
Speaker 3 (35:00):
Okay, well, we're going to find out.
Speaker 2 (35:03):
But it is funny to watch the.
Speaker 3 (35:06):
The childlike attitudes of some of these folks.
Speaker 2 (35:12):
I got receipts. You invited me in, you were breastfeeding,
you invited me in. I think I was like a vampire.
I wasn't coming in unless you invited me. Oh, I
wonder what Ryan Reynolds thinks of all this crazy It
is three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to
twenty three at Chad Benson Show's your Twitter tweet at
his text the program. Love hearing from every single one
(35:34):
of you on this beautiful Friday right here on the
Chad Benson Show. Coming up in the second hour. More
on obviously the terror attack.
Speaker 19 (35:44):
Progress is being made and they believe that he worked
alone in terms of executing the attack itself. But there's
a critical question how was he radicalized?
Speaker 2 (35:54):
Did he do this online solely on his own, or was.
Speaker 19 (35:57):
There an Isis recruiter or handler directing this from behind
the scenes.
Speaker 2 (36:01):
And I think a lot of people are wondering that
because not only was he radicalized, it happened in a
very fast way. And as I said yesterday, I think
if anybody could have gotten to him, he would have
offered him a life that was outside of what he
was living in, which was just a nightmare. I think
you would have jumped at the opportunity. Look you missing
the show, ship grab the podcast. It is the Chad
(36:22):
Benson show.
Speaker 1 (36:23):
This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show, truth.
Speaker 3 (36:54):
Even if it hurts or lies to make you feel better.
Speaker 2 (37:00):
Something's going on in Britain well throughout Europe that liberal
governments don't want to talk about. We've got issues here
in America that I think are going to crop up
soon in the form of terrorism that the liberals don't
want to talk about. And their idea is, let's blame
white people. And look, they do it too, and it's
(37:22):
not a cultural thing. It is they've lost their blanking mind.
So while we've had the issue of an American born
chat remember as an American born terrorist, I know, and
quite frankly, and I'll say this, and I've said it
over the last couple of days. I don't think he
(37:42):
was a I think he was a disturbed individual who
was radicalized rather easily because he was a depressed, angry
at the world person, and he was low hanging fruit
for groups that like Isis al Qaeda, who hate the West,
(38:08):
and he was easily manipulated into doing something because he
was probably a dundant without ISIS, this guy was. He
was a hot mess. I don't use their names, but
the reality is yeah, this guy committed an act of
terror in the name of ISIS. I mean, wasn't really
(38:30):
directed by ISIS. But there's a bigger picture here. It
is a bigger thing at play, which is the West
is finding out that there are groups of people in
their countries Ours, Britains, Germany, Italy, France, Belgium, pick a
(38:54):
Scandinavian country. We go on and on that do not
want to be any part of the culture that they've
moved to and in fact, in many cases hate the culture,
want to live the lives they want to live the
way they want to live it and have used the
kindness of the West against them. So right now in
(39:18):
Britain there is a massive scandal. Now this actually took
place in the eighties and then in like two early
two thousands and may still be going on in many
places of what they're calling grooming gangs. So you've got
areas throughout Britain, from Luton to a place called Oldham, Telford, Rochdale,
(39:42):
where they are for the most part almostlm some you know,
you've got You've got Pakistanis, you've got several other ethnicities,
but for the most part it's almost them, and they're all.
You know, they're completely closed off from anything that is Britain.
They do not want to become part of the culture.
(40:03):
They don't want to do any of that stuff. They
want no part of it and want to live their
lives and that includes if you venture into their area,
being able to do whatever the hell they want to you.
So the scandal is a lot of young women, mostly
and by young women, I mean young girls, mostly white,
raped and abused over and over again and over and
(40:25):
over again. So a report came out and said it
was an epidemic. It was. It was awful, but you know,
it had nothing to do with culture or skin skin color.
I want to take the skin color out of it
had all to do with culture. Okay, it did, and
(40:45):
they kind of swept it under the rub and none
of these kids got any real justice. And we're not
talking about a few and this was all made up.
We're talking about the last candid was of fourteen hundred
young girls. And why didn't this become a bigger story
because there was the labor, which is so you've got
the Tories, that's the conservative, the labor is the liberal
(41:11):
said we just keep this quiet. We don't want to
make this about race or culture because you didn't want
to be honest with people. Because everybody in the world
of politics and academia and and and you know, these
these intellectuals, it's it's they've lost their blanking mind because
their thought is, if we do something that may come
(41:34):
across as racists, will look bad, and we don't want
to be even if what we're saying is true, they
may perceive it to be racist. So no, we're more
worried about how people perceive us. And so for the
last like forty eight hours, Elon Musk has just been
(41:58):
blasting the Brits saying you need to be a national inquiry.
People are calling for it, even on the labor side
that messed up when they had an opportunity, and the
Tories they messed up when they've had an opportunity. But
now that it's out there and this has become a
bigger scandal because of all the stuff that's happening over there,
and truly a nightmare that is.
Speaker 3 (42:19):
Going on.
Speaker 2 (42:21):
Of allowing god knows how many people into Western countries
who want nothing to do with Western culture.
Speaker 3 (42:33):
Yet the liberal.
Speaker 2 (42:37):
Nutjobs that are running a lot of these places want
to sweep.
Speaker 3 (42:44):
Everything under the rug.
Speaker 2 (42:46):
Tell anybody who says, hey, these people don't want any
part of what we are doing over here, you demonize
them and call them racist, and if you dare bring
it up, you may go to jail for even saying something.
Case in point, this youngster name's Samantha Smith. She was
raped the whole bunch. She saw her person go to
(43:08):
jail to get let out early. And when she went
on the a few of the talk shows in the
last week or so, guests who paid her visit.
Speaker 20 (43:18):
I was on your show last Monday say same time
practically I came off. There was a fantastic response from
the public. I was really really my heart was warmed
by the support and you know, outreach that I received
from those that either didn't know what had been going
on in Telford for decades, you know, up to a
thousand girls had been reported to have been abused as
(43:42):
by grooming gangs since the nineteen eighties, or those that
were that had no idea that it could potentially still
be going on. In the scale of police counsel and
social service failings. I went back home, I went back
to Telford and the next day around lunchtime to police
officers banged on my door demanding this. I speak to
them about my interview.
Speaker 3 (44:04):
So I want you to think about this.
Speaker 2 (44:05):
She is a sexual assault survivor, she's young, her person
went to jail. People are pissed and angry about it nationwide,
calling for inquiries, including Kemmy Bnach, who is going to
be one day the I probably pronounce her name wrong
and for that, I'm sorry, Jimmy. She'll probably be prime
(44:26):
minister one day, the first black prime minister. And she's awesome,
saying Okay, enough is enough. We've had enough, We've had enough.
It's time victims get justice. By the way, she's black,
Oh my god. Racism, but kind of a weird racism
because you're talking about another.
Speaker 3 (44:41):
Person's culture, soun's culturism. Do you see where're going with this?
Speaker 2 (44:46):
This insanity of trying to draw some sort of parallel line.
But you can go.
Speaker 3 (44:51):
White people do it too. This has nothing to.
Speaker 2 (44:54):
Do with First of all, and I'll say this, a
lot of people don't understand. This was the Swedes coming
to America and they decided we want everybody to be
Swedish and you gotta live like us, right, you gotta,
you gotta everybody's gotta have ikea furniture and driveavolvo. I'd say,
kiss my ask get out of here. That's not our culture. Okay,
(45:18):
everybody's gonna have meat balls, not the good meatballs. He's
Swedish peoples. No, this is a cultural issue, period, case closed,
end of story.
Speaker 3 (45:30):
They always want to draw a parallel.
Speaker 2 (45:32):
Same thing last night with Laurence O'Donnell and what the
guy did in New Orleans. He was a terrorist, period.
Now he had mental issues and it made it easier
for him to be a terrorist because he was looking
to glom onto anything that would essentially make him feel better.
(46:00):
And they did that, you know, told him how the
world was mean to him and the West is horrible
and et cetera, et cetera, and then go on and
on and on because he was looking for a reason
to blame other people for his failures. But that being said,
Lawrence has to draw the parallel. Well, you know what
Timothy McVay, white guy, oh, because that's what the left does.
Speaker 5 (46:25):
First, there was Timothy McVay, an American military veteran who
killed one hundred and sixty eight people, including nineteen children,
and a terrorist attack on a federal building in Oklahoma City.
Timothy McVay parked a truck outside that building loaded with
explosives in an act of home grown American terrorism. Timothy
(46:50):
mcvay's hatred of the American government was not tamed in
any way by his service in the American military. So
two with America's latest terrorist attack in New Orleans on
New Year's Eve, with an American military veteran driving a
pickup truck through a crowd to murder fourteen people. The
(47:13):
American military veteran terrorist was then killed and an exchange
of gunfire with police.
Speaker 2 (47:21):
Have to draw the parallel because we've got to make
sure that everybody understands that, Hey, Americans, white folk, you
guys do this too. Nobody's saying that people aren't evil
and bad. Timothy May was a scumbag. He was a
poss and I hope he's rotting in hell right now.
You're not getting any arguments, but that's what the left does. Hey,
(47:48):
all these girls were rapes by who, by Pakistani's and
it's gone on for years and we've got a report
about it. But don't mention any of that stuff because
it'll seem like that it's racism. And culturalisms. It's different.
It's a clash. Don't don't say that because we don't
want to be perceived it that way. Well is that
the truth?
Speaker 3 (48:05):
Yes, but still.
Speaker 2 (48:09):
Keep doing what you're doing and you'll pay the price.
Keep doing what you're doing. In America in the West,
we better wake our asses up. This is not about
the color of the skin. It's about the culture period
(48:29):
three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty
three atchadmenton show. Is your Twitter tweet as texta program?
Raycon best ear buds round, love my Raycons. It's a
new year, twenty twenty five. You're gonna get active. You
can get there, work can out, let me go, go, go,
go go. You want Raycons? Why because they fit perfectly, sweat,
weather resistant, all of that stuff. Yes, active, noise cancelation,
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multi connectivity, eight hours of talk time, thirty two hours
of battery life, fast charging.
Speaker 3 (48:58):
We go on and on and on and on. It's incredible.
Speaker 2 (49:02):
So as you're getting out there listening to the Chad
Benson Show podcast, say to yourself, you know what I
can get some of these Raycons. They look amazing, they
feel incredible, and they're in my ears, And yes, kids
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(49:23):
Go to buye raycon dot com slash Chad get a
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thank you, Chad. You're welcome by Raycon dot com. Slash
Chad by Raycon dot Com slash Chad Chad Benson show.
Speaker 1 (49:48):
Chad Benson already say.
Speaker 14 (49:50):
The twenty twenty four cyber truck was spotted at the
hotel at seven thirty five am Wednesday, driving through the
valet entrance and then pulling off.
Speaker 2 (49:58):
An hour later.
Speaker 3 (49:59):
Video show the.
Speaker 14 (50:00):
Cyber truck pulling onto Las Vegas Boulevard, later exploding into
a fiery ball, flames tearing through the vehicle before firefighters
put out the blaze.
Speaker 3 (50:09):
At least seven people injured. Everybody's looking for it.
Speaker 2 (50:12):
This has got to be a frame job, right, This
is this is this is part It's big conspiracy. By
the way, if everything in the world is a conspiracy,
there's a problem with that.
Speaker 3 (50:23):
There is. I mean, if everything in the world is
a conspiracy, you've got some issues. Uh.
Speaker 2 (50:28):
This guy apparently cheating on his wife. They had broken
up about a week earlier. I think he was mentally distressed,
he had a young baby, he had some I think
he had some serious issues PTSD.
Speaker 3 (50:40):
I I don't know what they are, and I'm sure
we'll find out more.
Speaker 2 (50:43):
But everybody's always trying to look for well, this has
to be because of this, or this is easily a
frame job.
Speaker 3 (50:50):
This guy is an expert in this, this and this.
Speaker 2 (50:52):
I think the dude had a hot mess of a
life and and and I think that he had chosen
to to bounce. That's I mean, that's it. I don't
think there's Sometimes the easiest answer is you know, it's
all comes razor right, Like.
Speaker 3 (51:10):
It's easy answer.
Speaker 2 (51:12):
And you know what, because everybody's always looking at let's
put puzzle pieces together.
Speaker 3 (51:15):
We've got to put pieces together. Let's put this over here.
Speaker 2 (51:17):
It's got to be you're trying to connect it because
partially because you're terrified. You know, a lot of people
are afraid, right, there's got to be a big conspiracy,
and they want to have control, and they figure if
they figure out what what is you know, this and
that and how they can tie everything together, they'll have
some you know, a monarker of control. And the reality
is that's just not true. And sometimes you just read
too much in it. Sometimes people are just disturbed.
Speaker 14 (51:40):
Inside that burned out truck, police uncovering two semi automatic weapons,
canisters of gasoline, camp fuel, and large firework mortars. Police
say libels Burger's military ID, passport and credit cards also found.
Sources say libels Burger's wife told authorities he'd been out
of the house in Colorado's Springs since Christmas following a
(52:01):
dispute over infidelity.
Speaker 2 (52:02):
I mean, can you know she she is staged as well.
I mean, I don't know, Jenny, she knows. We sometimes
we want things to be bigger because we're so distrustful
of the media. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty
four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show. It's your Twitter,
your Instagram, all of the other things right here on
(52:25):
the Chad Benson Show. Meanwhile, they're coming together as one,
but maybe not talking about the Republicans.
Speaker 3 (52:37):
Marjorie Taylor Greed, who are.
Speaker 2 (52:38):
You voting for?
Speaker 18 (52:39):
I cannot wait to get started.
Speaker 1 (52:41):
I'll be voting for Mike Johnson.
Speaker 18 (52:43):
I will be looking ahead in complete hopefulness and working
as hard as possible.
Speaker 2 (52:50):
That's Marjorie Taylor Green. She is voting for Mike Johnson,
which you would think, what, uh, yeah, because I think
Trump is first said so, but secondly, I think the
reality of being that person that is going to say, hey,
(53:10):
we're going to absolutely stop everything because I have got
to make sure that I make my stand here when
I think Mike would be in real trouble. If it
was a second term of Biden or Kamala Harris, I
think it'd be a totally different story. But because it's.
Speaker 3 (53:26):
Trump and you want to hit the ground running, it's
a different story.
Speaker 2 (53:29):
And you want to make sure the senators make sure
they know, hey, look, we're with you all the way,
but you're not going to run.
Speaker 3 (53:37):
Over us here. There's got to be unity because.
Speaker 2 (53:40):
You don't have a ten vote majority. So you better unified,
not just now, but going forward on a lot of things,
and make sure that you're one rather than the voices
of many who want to have their own bold If
that makes sense. Such Chad, that's a job.
Speaker 12 (54:18):
Fun Chad Benson.
Speaker 21 (54:19):
Show, The Chat Benson Show as we were in twenty
(54:42):
twenty five, We're gonna be doing some really cool, fun
new segments.
Speaker 2 (54:46):
They're gonna start on Monday. Like I said, we were
gonna take this whole week off, but the new stuff
kicks off on Monday. But we still have some stuff
we're gonna be doing that we started at the end
of last year, which was just a few days ago,
that we're gonna to continue to do. And one of
them is the Wheel of Surprise. That's where we spin
(55:07):
the wheel and wherever it stops, that's the story we
go to. And today we've got several stories up here.
Some of them are a little longer than others. Some
of them are just like, are you kidding me? Kind
of thing?
Speaker 22 (55:21):
Oh kids, are you ready for Wheel of Surprise? Oh Yo?
Speaker 3 (55:37):
From wheel to reel. ID.
Speaker 23 (55:39):
Before you plan out a twenty twenty five vacation, make
sure your driver license or state ID is compliant with
an upcoming law. A real ID will become your stamp
of approval to boord domestic flights. The real ID law
finally takes effect in May of next year. After two
decades of delays, Congress passed the ID Act in two
(56:01):
thousand and five to boost nationwide security following the nine
to eleven terror attacks, But year after year the government
ran into hurdles to enforce the mandate, the most recent
setback coming as a result of the COVID nineteen pandemic.
Speaker 2 (56:16):
All right, so that's right, real ID will be here.
It's May of this year. But the issue is now,
if you have a passport, you're totally fine. You know,
you're good there. But the issue has been for a
lot of these places is the DMVs. Right, So your
Department of Motor Vehicles, wherever you are, your MVD, DMV, ABCDFD.
(56:40):
They're not set up yet to implement any of this.
And remember this is all for our safety.
Speaker 23 (56:46):
The new law requires every state to verify the identity
of anyone eighteen years in older through their Social Security number,
legal name, date of birth, and proof of address before
issuing an ID or driver license. Essentially, the new cards
are enhanced versions of the typical state issued driver license
(57:07):
or ID. A gold, white or black star signifies an
individual meets the federal security credential set by the real
ID act.
Speaker 2 (57:17):
I wanted to make sure that there wasn't some special ones,
like if you got one that's a different color than
everybody else. What's that mean? So? Gold or black star
is the most common combination? Okay, white star inside a
gold star black circle. Some states use that combination star
on the state silhouette. Main will be using that and
(57:37):
a star on top of a state's logo. California, we'll
use that. So that's the difference. Your idea will almost
look the same except for the star.
Speaker 23 (57:47):
What real IDs are considered optional? You can still receive
a standard license or ID instead of a star. It
will note federal limits apply, meaning there's restrictions for specific activities.
This matters most for frequent flyers. Real ID is what
the TSA will now use at security checkpoints as a
(58:08):
screening tool before you board a flight. The Department of
Homeland Security says without a real ID, travelers will need
a passport or military ID to fly within the US.
A real ID is not required to drive a car
or to vote. You can still use a standard driver
license or ID.
Speaker 2 (58:27):
So how do you get your real ID? Because we're
here to solve all the mysteries FM you so to
get a real ID vas your state's DMV office and
provide a documentation providing your identity, solid security number, and residency,
including two not one, but two current proofs of address.
All documents must be originals or certified copies. Check your
state versus specific requirements before going, as they.
Speaker 3 (58:47):
May vary slightly. What it's the Wheel of Surprise.
Speaker 2 (59:00):
Oh twenty twenty five is bringing us all kinds of stuff,
including loud budgeting.
Speaker 24 (59:13):
Loud budgeting is a way to be more vocal and
transparent about your finances, and it is quite the departure
from the quiet luxury trend, which was all about subtly
and discreetly spending a lot of money on luxury, minimalist stuff.
Fast on the heels of the quiet luxury trend, inspired
by shows like Succession.
Speaker 2 (59:32):
She brought a normal sort of hum our, laughing stock
and polite society.
Speaker 24 (59:37):
Comes a new financial trend, making a very different kind
of statement.
Speaker 11 (59:41):
It's not I don't have enough, it's I don't want
to spend loud budgeting.
Speaker 1 (59:46):
We're doing drinks or dinner, We're not doing both.
Speaker 24 (59:49):
People taking to social media to broadcast their spending goals
and limits.
Speaker 1 (59:54):
Oh sorry, I can't.
Speaker 13 (59:55):
I don't want to spend one hundred dollars going out
to dinner with you.
Speaker 23 (59:57):
When I comput one hundred dollars in my high yield
savings count.
Speaker 25 (01:00:00):
It holds you accountable, but also it allows the people
that care about you to.
Speaker 1 (01:00:04):
Also hold you accountable.
Speaker 2 (01:00:05):
Okay, so first of all, everybody needs okay, an accountability boddy,
what an accountabilitybody? An accountabilitybody? Yeah, everybody needs one of those.
Say that five times fast accountabilitybody or five times fast.
Speaker 12 (01:00:19):
Yes.
Speaker 3 (01:00:20):
So, loud budgeting is you being loud.
Speaker 2 (01:00:26):
Over the budgeting in your life, as opposed to quiet wealth.
Speaker 3 (01:00:35):
Loud budgeting more.
Speaker 24 (01:00:38):
This TikTok video viewed more than one and a half
million times, resonating with people who are tired of staying
quiet about their finances.
Speaker 11 (01:00:46):
My friend wants to go out to dinner, I'm just
going to text them low budgeting this month. I think
financial transparency with your friends is something that you don't
have to be embarrassed about.
Speaker 24 (01:00:59):
With housing price, he says, up nearly five percent in
food costs, still more than two percent higher than a
year ago. Financial expert Tiffany Alice says loud budgeting can
help you cut back on impulse buying.
Speaker 25 (01:01:11):
Budgeting out loud is not just also the words, but
it's also having these tools in place.
Speaker 24 (01:01:15):
Her loud budgeting tool, using a deactivation sticker on your
credit card at list what you're saving money for, like
a big trip, stopping you from making unnecessary purchases.
Speaker 2 (01:01:27):
You know what also does that? Having no money?
Speaker 3 (01:01:31):
The fear of being shamed when you go to swipe
your card. Sorry, this doesn't work.
Speaker 2 (01:01:36):
What do you mean it doesn't work? Loud budgeting it's
the new thing for twenty twenty half.
Speaker 25 (01:01:43):
Whenever I take out the card, it's a physical reminder
because I'm budgeting out loud.
Speaker 13 (01:01:48):
Is this a need?
Speaker 1 (01:01:49):
Is this a love?
Speaker 25 (01:01:51):
Because if it's just a likeer one, then that's ten
twenty thirty less dollars that I can put toward my
dream tred.
Speaker 24 (01:01:58):
If you are just starting to make a bus, take
a look at your credit or debit card statement and
write down where your money went toward different categories for
the month. So rent, bills, groceries, entertainment. That's your baseline
to get a sense of where you can start to
make any spending cuts.
Speaker 10 (01:02:13):
Okay, so do that with loud budgeting. I can't go
with you tonight. I'm saving money because I broke a ass.
Speaker 3 (01:02:23):
Loud budgeting.
Speaker 2 (01:02:26):
That's everything in today's world has to have some sort
of moniker or slang. It can't be just like I'm
working on, you know, budgeting.
Speaker 3 (01:02:39):
No, it's kind of loud. Indeed, the wheel of surprise.
Speaker 2 (01:02:50):
Oh no way, we're gonna get this one.
Speaker 3 (01:02:55):
Goat killer.
Speaker 13 (01:02:56):
Did this fresh faced cheerleader kill her classmates pet goat
so she could win a competition? Seventeen year old Aubrey
van Landingham is accused of deliberately poisoning the six month
old goat named Willie to eliminate a competitor in a
Future Farmers of America competition. Aubrey is a high school
cheerleader in Cedar Park, Texas.
Speaker 3 (01:03:18):
I'm Aubrey and I brought gummy bears.
Speaker 13 (01:03:20):
She posted this video on TikTok six months ago. A
lot of her spare time is spent raising pet goats.
This video shows her competing with a goat named Lacy. Now,
Aubrey is charged with cruelty to livestock animals in connection
with the death of Willy the goat.
Speaker 2 (01:03:38):
What are you doing, lady, You're a goat killer. I
didn't know the Future Farmers of America was so competitive.
Although if you've ever been on any of the tiktoks
and whatnot and the reels, and you've seen that blonde
girl and her brother that do the pig stuff right,
and they got their head down. Oh they're serious about it.
(01:03:59):
This lady was sooner serious though. She was like, I'll
kill anybody gets in my goat way.
Speaker 13 (01:04:03):
Please say. They have surveillance video showing the team entering
the goat's pen and force feeding it with a large syringe.
The goat died twenty one hours later following a seizure
and autopsy report showed the cause of death to be
poisoning from a commonly used farm pesticide, goat killer.
Speaker 3 (01:04:22):
Can you believe, like that's insane?
Speaker 2 (01:04:24):
You were so.
Speaker 3 (01:04:28):
Competitive. I mean, you gotta give her that, she's competitive.
Speaker 2 (01:04:30):
But you killed the goat. For God's sake, the goat
didn't do anything. You didn't try to kill your competitor.
You tried to kill your competitor's goat.
Speaker 13 (01:04:38):
Restaffi David says Aubrey used her cell phone to search
Google for how much bleach can kill an animal, poisoning pets,
what you should know, and how to clear search history.
Linda Martin, who runs a Goat Sanctuary in California is
shocked by the allegations, and.
Speaker 16 (01:04:56):
If it's just about winning a competition, that's really sad,
that's crazy.
Speaker 13 (01:05:01):
The mother of Aubrey's teenage rival is quoted as saying
she admitted to poisoning the goat multiple times over several days.
It's all bizarre. We want justice served.
Speaker 2 (01:05:13):
I like how they said, if it's just about, you know,
winning a competition, Well, hold on a second, is there
a way to justify killing the goat that's not eating it? Well,
I mean, like if she was, say, sacrificing the golt
to some sort of deity, maybe that's okay. She wasn't
(01:05:35):
doing it at this this time, is what we're trying
to say.
Speaker 3 (01:05:38):
She's a goat killer.
Speaker 2 (01:05:39):
That was the weel of surprise three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benzigella, your Twitter,
your Instagram and all of the other things. A lot
of stuff still to get to. We're packing it in today.
Speaker 3 (01:05:54):
Kids. I mean, we do this.
Speaker 2 (01:05:56):
We're not these boring shows, like all day I'm gonna
talk about how evil people are, but hey, we're gonna
talk about all kinds of stuff. It's what you get
from me. Right if you're new to the show and
you're just starting to listen, now that's what you get
for me. We have fun. We talk about serious issues,
but at the same time we talk about life like
goat killers. Your sister's really competitive. What are you gonna do?
(01:06:20):
I can't believe that Future Farmers of America is very diabolical. Indeed,
I'm kidding. You know what's gonna happen now that I've
joked about that, the FFA, Future Farmers of America. It's
one of those alphabet agencies. Somebody's gonna go. You know,
I was in Future Farmers of America and we never
did anything like that.
Speaker 3 (01:06:40):
I can't believe you should use an apology.
Speaker 2 (01:06:42):
Shit up. Roughgreens areuffgreens dot com slash chat.
Speaker 3 (01:06:47):
Go to rough Greens now and decide for yourself.
Speaker 2 (01:06:50):
I have a cat or dog man, you have both,
and I would like to give them some rough Greens Now.
Rough Greens is incredible vitamins, minerals, probiotics and make a
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Because they got Mealgreens s o a new cat. It
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(01:07:12):
Other cat angus. He had to be on rough Greens
to save his life. And the reason was because his
skin was so bad. He had so many allergies that
we couldn't figure out what it was and it was
costing us all this money.
Speaker 3 (01:07:25):
And all we did was we didn't even change his food.
Speaker 2 (01:07:27):
We just started giving him the outgreens, sprinkle it right
on top of his food, off cane, the comb and
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Jumpstart trial bag for free. You cover the costs of
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Benson Show.
Speaker 16 (01:08:09):
Deep States is No Deep Doo doo eeah the chat
fans and show.
Speaker 7 (01:08:18):
The Surgeon General's report calls alcohol use a leading and
preventable cause of cancer, saying drinking is responsible for nearly
one hundred thousand cancer cases and about twenty thousand cancer
deaths per year. That puts alcohol behind tobacco and obesity
as America's leading preventable cancer causes. The reports is consuming
it increases the risk of cancers in the mouth, throat, esophagus, liver, colon,
(01:08:41):
and in women breasts. The report recommends new warning labels
more explicitly tying alcohol use to that increased risk.
Speaker 2 (01:08:48):
Wording cattle labels waters about to get a draka there.
Those things are totally modern. Those warning labels are brand though.
Speaker 7 (01:08:57):
The current government warning label on alcohol beverages hasn't changed
since nineteen eighty eight. Oh Yeah warns of the risk
of birth defects if pregnant women consume alcohol, and says
consumption impairs one's ability to drive and operate machinery. The
message also vaguely warns of health problems, but the search
in general now says the label should explicitly call alcohol
use a cause of cancer, similar to the warnings on
(01:09:20):
packs of cigarettes.
Speaker 2 (01:09:21):
Like health problems is kind of like climate change doesn't
matter which way it goes. We were right, climate change,
it's cold today, climate change.
Speaker 3 (01:09:31):
It's hot today, climate change.
Speaker 2 (01:09:34):
I have a health problem, see says so on the bottle,
But they want specifics. I didn't know that that scientifically,
they have pinpointed that because of alcohol. And I know
that sounds silly, but of course we've heard for years that,
yes it is to me, and this is just me.
I'm not a scientist anymore. I look at you know,
(01:09:54):
correlation causation kind of thing where I have a feeling,
and this is just me saying it air kitch, having
been around alcohol and drugs a vast majority of my
life with people who are alcoholics, drug addicts and whatnot.
Not anymore, not you know, not an adult, but when
I was a kid growing up, and that a lot
of people who drink heavily, which is I think a
lot of what this looks at probably smoke or smoked
(01:10:17):
at one time and probably aren't in the best shape.
So you start going, okay, let's start putting this together
and putting this together and putting this together. So you're
saying to yourself, all right, whoa whoa, whoa whoa? Who
Is there any kind of recommendation or is this just no? Right?
Speaker 3 (01:10:33):
Is this is this is this Are we going dry?
Speaker 26 (01:10:37):
The previous perception was that moderate or limited drinking one
a day for women and two for men had little
risk to your health or well being, but the Surgeon
General now says that simply is not the case for
cancer risk. He says one of every six to six
breast cancer cases, for instance, is attributable to alcoholic consumption,
and he's now calling for that updated labeling on alcoholic
beverages to include a heightened risk of breast cancer, colon cancer,
(01:11:01):
and at least five other malignancies now linked to scientific
studies to alcohol consumption.
Speaker 2 (01:11:07):
And you guys know, if you've listened to the show
for a long time, I don't drink, I don't smoke,
I don't do drugs. Is adam Ant would say what
do you do nothing? I'm a teatota say what saying?
We're teetotla And I don't care what you do with
your life as long as you not hurt anybody else,
I don't care. But it's always with moderation. And people
will say, well, what about the Italians. They seem to
(01:11:28):
live to be like five thousand years old, and they again,
correlation and causation, they'll live the kind of stressful life
the week they eat food that's fresh without any of
these crappy ass ingredients that we put into stuff to
make us want and crave it more. There's gonna be
all kinds of warning labels on stuff. Where do you
go get your ding dong and they want to see
your ID? I like to buy some Twinkies? Are you
(01:11:50):
over eighteen?
Speaker 3 (01:11:51):
He said? Ding dong?
Speaker 2 (01:11:53):
They still make ding dongs? I love those things.
Speaker 3 (01:11:55):
Do you remember when they used to wrap them up individually?
Like it was this aluminum foil. Oh, those were the days.
Those were the days America.
Speaker 2 (01:12:05):
Yeah, three, two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four to
twenty three.
Speaker 3 (01:12:10):
At Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (01:12:11):
Is your Twitter, your Instagram and all of the other
things right here in the Chad Benson Show Coming up
our three more on Yes, the evil that was the
terror attack.
Speaker 6 (01:12:26):
In the audits, the men who sped down Bourbon Street
in a pickup truck, killing fourteen people were shot dead
by police seconds later, but the FBI's Christopher Reya says
to many questions about himsu Din Jabbar are left unanswered.
To that end, we have received just over four hundred
tips from the public, and that information is being followed
both here in New Orleans and across the country. Reyes
(01:12:49):
says that on his drive from Houston, Jabbar posted several
videos declaring his support for ices.
Speaker 2 (01:12:55):
We'll see again. There's a lot of questions out there
that you remain unanswered in it may never be answered.
Com Mission to show Brad the podcast Chad Bent to Charm.
Speaker 1 (01:13:03):
This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (01:13:32):
Question, how did he become radicalized? That's the big question
out there. How did this guy who was an army cat,
how did he become radicalized? Well, I've pointed out I
think his radicalization came on rather quickly, which it seems
to be showing it did. And I think a lot
(01:13:54):
of his radicalization was because he had given up on life,
because his life sucked. He was living with goats and sheep,
He had no money, broke af he had a few girlfriends,
three ex wives. His kid was taken away from him
(01:14:14):
or kids not quite sure. We know they were taken away.
We don't need to know anything else about that. These
kids didn't do anything. We don't need to hammer down
on any of that stuff. The dude had basically lost
everything and guess whose fault that was not his? It
was yours in the west and the evil that was
that's what it was. This guy was crying out for
(01:14:36):
help and lo and behold the low hanging fruit is
what ices saw, and he was amenable. This guy would
have probably oft himself at some point in time.
Speaker 3 (01:14:53):
Because he was angry at the world. And I said
that yesterday.
Speaker 2 (01:14:56):
I think the isis and the the reality of and
there's a bigger conversation that we're having about culture and
all this kind of stuff around this, but the reality is,
I think it was he got into something because he
had nothing else, and it made him angry, and this
was giving him a say, the reason that your life
(01:15:18):
sucks is because X, Y, and Z. The reason for
this is because of this, and he was getting angry
or angry or angry or angry.
Speaker 3 (01:15:24):
That's how he got radicalized, was that.
Speaker 1 (01:15:30):
Simple progress is being made.
Speaker 19 (01:15:32):
And they believe that he worked alone in terms of
executing the attack itself. But there's a critical question how
was he radicalized. Did he do this online solely on
his own or was there an ISIS recruiter or handler
directing this from behind the scenes.
Speaker 2 (01:15:49):
Well, there was, but I think a lot of well,
you know what, in saying that I'm gonna say this,
in saying that that might not be true, you would
we want to think, you know, we're trying to connect
all the dots because we as human beings, the creatures
that we are, we want to know. I must know
the answer to the question. So I get that. But
(01:16:14):
he could have just isolate himself in such a way,
started going down rabbit hole after rabbit hole, watching video
after video, and that could have been how he did it,
because by the sounds of it, he kind of made
a serious, quick pivot into running a bunch of people over.
I think he went out to New Orleans with no
(01:16:36):
real plan of running people over. If what I'm reading
is correct and what I'm being told again, this is
all fluid. That part of the reason that he did
what he did, he was inspired by something that happened
a day or so before. Well, he was already out there,
so he was just pissed and angry at the world.
(01:16:59):
Oh boy, see, but the left wants to remind everybody
that he was made in America, which it was like,
you'd be made in America all you want, But the
jihad and the insanity of radical Islam is not made
in America. But the left wants to remind everybody this
(01:17:22):
administration wants her mind. He was made here. Yeah, I'm
I'm we're not denying that.
Speaker 3 (01:17:34):
Well Trump, I get it.
Speaker 2 (01:17:35):
Trump posted something, so what so what by the way,
Trump's right, you don't think that they're Let's just for
the sake of argument before we get back to made
in America, let'll stick with the Trump thing because you
nobody's gonna come out.
Speaker 10 (01:17:49):
Yeah, Trapp said step that it was just wrong. He
put it something on the Interweb's Chad.
Speaker 3 (01:17:54):
I know.
Speaker 2 (01:17:54):
I tweeted it out too.
Speaker 3 (01:17:55):
Yeah, but that's evil and wrong.
Speaker 2 (01:17:57):
No, it's not. It's reality. You can't tell me that
there are two million godaways in this country.
Speaker 3 (01:18:07):
Two million.
Speaker 2 (01:18:09):
So these are people that are known to be in
the country, but we don't know who they are because
they didn't come through a port. They snuck across. How
do you know that, Because we've got film at eleven
That's how we know. So you mean to tell me
that there are two millions here and none of them
(01:18:30):
are potential terrorists even though many people, including the likes
of Christopher Raha and several others have said, yeah, this
is the worst potential terror situation we are in since
pre nine to eleven. But again.
Speaker 3 (01:18:51):
It's about one ormind everybody. He's made in America.
Speaker 4 (01:18:53):
So this does appear to be an individual, a US
citizen radical eye to violence by a foreign terrorist ideology,
specifically the Isis ideology. This is a phenomenon, a phenomenon
of homegrown violent extremists that we have seen develop and
(01:19:14):
emerge over the past ten years.
Speaker 2 (01:19:19):
So he said a foreign phenomenon the like the Isis phenomenon.
So if you want to know what the Isis phenomenon is,
it is a radical ideology that is both strict selfie
principles with violent extremism. Is there a religion attached to that? Hmm, yes,
(01:19:49):
isis right? So this is the Sunni Islam. It believes
in establishing a caliphate, a state governed by Islamic laws Shariah.
Speaker 3 (01:20:00):
That's what this is. But you want to remind everybody
that it was imported.
Speaker 2 (01:20:04):
He may be born here, but he he was ascribing
to this, at least that's what he said. He went
down a rabbit hole. He blamed everybody and then some
and then he saw that the reason for that is
because everybody's a non believer and the West should pay,
et cetera, et cetera. But the left wants to remind
(01:20:28):
everybody that, you know, white people are just as bad,
if not worse, right, and American culture is just as bad,
if not worse. You are the idiots that believe that
you could go to Yellowstone and get out and take
a picture next to a giant effing buffalo selfie, and
then you're surprised when you're gord in the heart.
Speaker 3 (01:20:52):
I thought the bufflu knuwah, I loved it. I'm a vegan. Yeah, idiots.
Speaker 5 (01:20:58):
First there was Timothy McVay, an American military veteran killed
one hundred and sixty eight people, including nineteen children, and
a terrorist attack on a federal building in Oklahoma City.
Timothy McVay parked a truck outside that building loaded with
explosives in an act of home grown American terrorism. Timothy
(01:21:24):
mcvay's hatred of the American government was not tamed in
any way by his service in the American military. So
too with America's latest terrorist attack in New Orleans on
New Year's Eve, with an American military veteran driving a
pickup truck through a crowd to murder fourteen people. The
(01:21:46):
American military veteran terrorist was then killed an exchange of
gunfire with police.
Speaker 2 (01:21:55):
Got to remind everybody that Timothy McVay, Yeah, you know
what he was. I hope he's rotting in hell. I
hope he's rotting in hell for what he did. Awful evil,
sob rotting in hell. But you want to remind us
of that because once again academia, liberals, the elite. They
(01:22:16):
want to remind everybody that America is a bad place,
that white people are evil and bad, and that those
are the people you should be terrified of.
Speaker 3 (01:22:23):
And this is all, you know, a figment of your imagination.
Speaker 2 (01:22:26):
They could come out today and bomb every major city
and have absolute writing and gunfire in the streets, killing,
and they would still say, you know who brought this
on America?
Speaker 3 (01:22:39):
White people? This want to.
Speaker 2 (01:22:46):
Bend over backwards for a culture, and that's what it is.
It is a culture clash between the freedom loving West
and a culture that is sixth century, a culture that
(01:23:09):
has no business in the modern world. They want to
remind everybody, though, that our culture is bad. Multiculturalism doesn't work.
We'll talked a bit about it last hour. There is
a big issue that is taking place in Britain brought
(01:23:35):
on by the likes of well, it happened for the
last decade or two, but it has come back to light.
Speaker 3 (01:23:46):
Because of a guy named Tommy Robinson.
Speaker 2 (01:23:48):
We'll get into that a little bit later, but it
has a lot to do with rape culture, in particular
in certain areas of Britain that are fully Islamic, and
reports came out and said, look, there was a lot
of stuff going on here and people were afraid to
report it. And even when they did the reports, they
hushened it because they didn't want to be seen as
(01:24:09):
being mhmm, not friendly to people of color and certain
cultures because those certain cultures believe they can do a
lot of things based on the belief that they have
that doesn't jive with modern society and the West period.
(01:24:36):
I mean, it's this is not something. This is not
oh you hate this or you hate no, no, it's culture.
You don't want to come to these cultures and integrate
into society. You don't want to be a part of
these cultures. You're coming over and you want to live
your life in certain ways based on your belief system.
(01:24:59):
You don't want any part of what the West is offering.
And that's the culture and the ideology that the American
homegrown idiot decided was going to be his his, his
saving grace. It's bigger than that. Three two, three, five,
(01:25:21):
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson
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Speaker 4 (01:26:16):
Shoe.
Speaker 1 (01:26:29):
Chad Benson.
Speaker 3 (01:26:31):
Now it's time to find out what's trending. What's trending?
Speaker 27 (01:26:36):
James Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Serena.
Speaker 2 (01:26:55):
What trpy? That's about what was treading on the webs
of the inter and the net on this SCRG is Friday.
It's the first Friday of two.
Speaker 3 (01:27:06):
Thousand and twenty five. Start with YAHOOO. You guys like
the way I do that?
Speaker 14 (01:27:14):
Do you?
Speaker 2 (01:27:15):
I always do it like that because I used to
go to I think it was the Ducks game Southern California.
They used to have like the Yahoo thing and the
guy would come on and go Yahoo Sugar Bowl. No
One trying to think TikTok cyber truck explosion, January squid game,
Jimmy Carter, Angel Reese. Is she doing OnlyFans? Is that
(01:27:36):
what she doing? She going on the only fans thing?
It's crazy.
Speaker 3 (01:27:42):
Money's there.
Speaker 2 (01:27:43):
Wayne Osmond, one of the lesser known Osmond's passed away
age seventy three, and the truck Bomber as well. I
don't use his name because you can't say it partially
and I'm just not giving him credit. Sorry, Osmond Duke
Ole miss the Gator Bowl last night, Sugar Bowl trending,
(01:28:06):
plane crash, California Pro Bowl, Fort Bragg again, the explosion
of Las Vegas, Jimmy Butler all trending in the Magical World.
Oh and Angel Rees again? Is she doing that? Is
(01:28:27):
that so over here? She gonna do only only fans
or something? I don't know, that's what I hear. It's
it's hard to tell, you know what. The money's there,
people will do it. I might talk a little bit
about that. Finally, over to the magical world of Twitter.
New Orleans, Nola, Happy New Year. Notre Dame isis Texas.
(01:28:47):
It's football team Oregon, Fort Bragg, the FBI All State
Sugar Bowl Islam Riley Leonard three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson shows your
Twitter tweet at his text the program.
Speaker 3 (01:29:04):
Right here on the Chat Benson Show Truro. That's the car.
Speaker 2 (01:29:12):
I think if you want to rent a car, you
can do it now, like just from your neighbor through
this app and everybody's like, are they involved in this?
I'm like, I don't really think they're part of it.
I just think people rent it cars. Sometimes there are
coincidences in life people. Sometimes there is coincidences and other
times there's not just pointing that out. It happens in life.
(01:29:36):
Last night there was a football game, The Sugar Bowl
was back on and Man Georgia got steamrolled. Bite fighting.
Speaker 3 (01:29:44):
Oh irish, here's a kick to start the half.
Speaker 9 (01:29:46):
Jane Harrison make it a chance here, I'm gonna bring
it out from his own two yard line, cuts it
in side, takes it out to the car line across
the numbers.
Speaker 2 (01:29:53):
Hold on the car sideline.
Speaker 3 (01:29:55):
Jane Harrison hit the.
Speaker 2 (01:29:56):
Chets across bitfield forty thirty tway ten.
Speaker 3 (01:30:00):
It's a touchdown kick off return fut Chandan.
Speaker 2 (01:30:05):
Harrison Bee wagged all season long.
Speaker 3 (01:30:09):
Thank god it is my fame.
Speaker 2 (01:30:12):
Want to return to start the second half?
Speaker 3 (01:30:16):
Bank Notre Dame Leeds nineteen to three.
Speaker 2 (01:30:19):
So we now know the final four. Here's something And
I tweeted out again the other night, if you were
the top four seeds, you gotta buy into the you know,
essentially the quarterfinals.
Speaker 3 (01:30:32):
All of those teams lost.
Speaker 2 (01:30:34):
We have Notre Dame and Penn State, Ohio State, and Texas.
I can't wait to give you my picks. I'll do
that next week. But there's a clear favorite here who
I think is going to win it all. And yet
people in Ohio, if you will wink wink nuts nudge,
still will not be happy with this guy. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson
Shows your Twitter if you're miss any of the show,
(01:30:55):
Shame Chad.
Speaker 12 (01:30:56):
Betson, chow Son, Chad.
Speaker 1 (01:30:59):
Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (01:31:23):
So as we deal with what is going on with terrorism,
and yesterday I heard an earful from some of you
lefties who were out there and you were angry. Yet
listen to me every day, which is bizarre because you
just want to sit there and screaming.
Speaker 3 (01:31:36):
You're just not worth whatever. You're a Nazi, Chad.
Speaker 2 (01:31:40):
Okay, I mean at that point, what do you say
to people? Oh, why would I argue with you? Because
it's a waste of time. You're looking for a reaction.
I'm not going to give it to you. And some
of you will chime in this culture thing, Chad, that
you're saying is evil at bad You shouldn't talk about
cultures other people.
Speaker 3 (01:32:00):
Cultures that way.
Speaker 2 (01:32:00):
I have every ride talk about other people's cultures on percent.
The beauty of the country I live in is we
can do that. Britain, a place that I used to
call my home, a place I love dearly, not as
much as America, but definitely it's my second home, has
(01:32:24):
lost their blanking mind. So this want in particular by
white people to always feel like they have to not
be honest because it may hurt somebody's feeling or they may.
Speaker 3 (01:32:42):
Be branded a racist, is a serious issue.
Speaker 2 (01:32:49):
We just played stuff earlier from Lawrence O'Donnell just wanting
everybody to know, wanted to make everybody aware that Timothy
McVeigh was the white guy and the American So therefore
other cultures can do whatever they want because the bad,
bad white folk, okay whatever. So currently in Britain there
(01:33:11):
is a situation that is bubbled back up to the top.
And this hats to do with report that came out
a while ago about investigation from twenty eleven two thousand
and I think it was fourteen that was it in
several areas from Roxdale, Telford Oldham. Isn't it old Ham?
Speaker 3 (01:33:33):
No, it's Oldham.
Speaker 2 (01:33:35):
About grooming gangs in particular, mostly islam Pakistani grooming gangs,
young girls that were raped, young girls that were abused
like you cannot believe, and the fear of publishing certain
parts of it because they didn't want the quote unquote
(01:33:55):
far right to use it and or to make it
a racial thing. People were pissed and angry about. So
it is bubbled back up again partially because of a
guy named Tommy Robinson. Now Tommy Robinson is he's in
every dyke gull you know, I mean slot is. He's
(01:34:17):
an every day gull. He's a pedocal activist, you know
me man To is all right in and he has
become like absolutely the liberals in particular, their main evil.
He's currently in prison for speech, by the way, for speech.
(01:34:40):
I just want to point that out, because he is
not happy with multiculturism. He is not happy with the
way that Britain's going. By the way, there are a
lot of people across the globe who are not happy
with the way that their country is changing, all in
the name of well diversity and culturalism.
Speaker 23 (01:34:59):
That's multi Elon Musk now a central part of US politics,
as part of Trump's inner circle, is making waves across
the Atlantic. In the UK, calling for government intervention in
a grooming gang scandal within a series of posts on
X that began with a call for the release of
political activists Tommy Robinson from a UK prison. His post
(01:35:21):
on X Free Tommy Robinson has sparked larger conversations, largely
within conservative circles in the US and Britain, with some
political leaders now calling for government reform and federal investigations
in the UK, all as a result of most recent posts.
Speaker 2 (01:35:40):
Now Tommy is lawisay totally this you know, right, it's
way he goes mikes one of m galis he's a
pretty fascististity chat any right back of the day he
might have been. It's just right now. A contempt of court,
by the way, is what he is. He is in
jail for that, so they call it. Uh, look, I'm
(01:36:03):
not gonna ladge you. He's a hard nut. He's a nutter.
That's the best way to describing. So if you don't know
what a nutter is in Britain, that's a person who's well,
let's just say he's well odd, you know, and bunching
a face. He's a nutter.
Speaker 3 (01:36:15):
Uh, he's an interesting character. I'm not gonna lie.
Speaker 2 (01:36:18):
I don't agree with him on everything, and I think
the and I think in his younger days he was
one of those jawbos going to the football matches.
Speaker 3 (01:36:25):
You know, Coles and Ale. But he's from Luton.
Speaker 2 (01:36:28):
Now, if you don't know anything about Luton, let's just
say you might as well be in Kabul. And he's
watched his culture and in change. I love cultures. But
we've used this analogy. We use it again over and
(01:36:49):
over and over and over and over and over and
over and over and over. Now continues it over and
over and over, over and over and over over again.
What binds us together, the strength is our common at Okay,
So that's the thing that binds us together, commonality. The
(01:37:09):
thing that doesn't work is everybody does their own thing
and then we come together. So if we're a chain
and we're all common we're all built of steel. Some
may be bigger, some may be smaller, some may be silver,
some may be black, but we're all built in the
(01:37:31):
common core of steel.
Speaker 3 (01:37:33):
We're all fastened that way.
Speaker 2 (01:37:35):
It's great multiculturalism is we're not common. So this one
may be built of steel, but this one's built of paper,
and this one over here is built of cardboard, and
this one over here is just built of string, so
when you pull it, it falls apart. That's multiculturalism in
(01:37:58):
a nutshell. Tommy is again, he's a nuts and he's
done some stuff that I'm wasn't a fan of back
in the day. But what he has seen is his
country change and the freedom of you know, we talk
about freedom of speech here. We take that for granted
like you could not believe, like you could not believe.
(01:38:25):
So this situation with him, he's become a like a
somewhat of a megastar because a lot of what he
does is his speech. And he said how he riles
people up. But we saw, you know, late last year
the issues that took place up in the northern parts
of England and the quote unquote riots that were happening,
and all of a sudden, you're gettingeople who are getting
(01:38:46):
arrested for Facebook posts and this, that and the other,
and this all plays together with the culturalism like we're
seeing here and what we're going to have here in
the future as we've allowed God knows how many people
to come into this country in the insanity of our
nights being easily taken advantage of because our leaders who
use for idiots. But in that situation with the groomy,
(01:39:10):
this is a girl named Samantha Smith. Now Samantha Smith
was a part of it as a youngster. She was
a survivor, her perpetrator went to jail. She's being outspoken
because she felt she got left behind essentially along with
everybody else. And she went on the other day on GBTV,
a Great Britain TV, and talked about all of the
(01:39:35):
stuff it was done to her, how everything was swept
under the rug, how nobody wanted to offend anybody's culture,
and then she got to knock at the door.
Speaker 20 (01:39:47):
I was on your show last Monday, say, same time
practically I came off. There was a fantastic response from
the public. I was really really my heart was warmed
by the support and and you know outreach that I
received from those that either didn't know what had been
going on in Telford for decades, you know, up to
a thousand girls had been reported to have been abused
(01:40:10):
as by grooming gangs since the nineteen eighties, or those
that were had no idea that it could potentially still
be going on in the scale of police counsel and
social service failings. I went back home. I went back
to Telford and the next day, around lunchtime, two police
officers banged on my door demanding that I speak to
them about my interview.
Speaker 2 (01:40:32):
She's not Tommy Robinson. She's a young girl that was
a survivor whose perpetrator went to jail but then was
released early. She is not that, and they're knocking at
her door because they don't want to offend anybody. People
with their Facebook posts, the likings, the sharings, Oh my God,
could be seen as racially insensitive, which would maybe potentially
(01:40:54):
be a hate crime.
Speaker 3 (01:40:56):
This is insane.
Speaker 2 (01:41:00):
It is when you do the things that you do
and you decide that, hey, we're gonna blame America for this,
or we're gonna blame white people for that, or we're
gonna blame American culture for this, or we're gonna blame
this young lady for saying something that while it's true,
it's true, but it's offensive racially to a bunch of people.
Speaker 3 (01:41:23):
We can't have that.
Speaker 2 (01:41:25):
When you start to do things where you destroy your culture,
to protect somebody else's culture because you've decided their identity
is far more important than the culture that has given
you all the things you have. Is when you see
everything going to hell in a handbasket, Welcome to Europe.
(01:41:45):
Europe is a mess. Their liberal leaders have allowed the
countries over there outside of Poland to have mass immigration
of people that do not want to integrate, that do
not like the culture of which they come to, but
they like the comfort which that culture provides, and then
(01:42:10):
they wonder why everything's going to hell in a handbasket.
And you have somebody like Tommy Robinson, because he looks
out there and says everything's changed and it's not changing
for the better. And our women are being assaulted and
our culture is being pushed aside, and politicians and the
(01:42:35):
media are paying more attention to other people and making
them victims, while the people that are struggling are getting nothing.
The people that truly were victimized are being told, don't
you say anything, Britain. That right there, Tommy Robinson, that's
(01:42:58):
on you, that's on you. And we've had four years
of an old man who doesn't know up from down
and who believes that just being kind and talking it
out is going to fix issues, and a administration and
(01:43:25):
media that is pushing for more things like well, America
is really not that good. And if you say that
it could be racist, even though it may be true.
You know, it's not about the race. It's about the culture.
It's not about race. You can be from Pakistan and
(01:43:49):
love America. You can be from America and hate America.
It's about the culture. Everybody wants the comfort that the
culture of the West provides. They just don't want to
be a part of the West. They don't want to
integrate and they don't want the rules. Multiculturalism doesn't work.
(01:44:16):
Lying about it is going to make it worse. Whether
it's here or in Britain, or in Germany or Australia.
It doesn't matter. When they say it's about race, it's wrong.
It's about culture. When they say it's because that person
(01:44:40):
has brown skin, wrong, It's because that person wants nothing
to do with the culture they're in. And that's how
you get the Tommy Robinson's of the world, because you
push them aside, you brandish them horrible things, and then
when things go sideways, you want to blame them.
Speaker 3 (01:45:02):
You're the one to blame three.
Speaker 2 (01:45:04):
Two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty three
at Chad Benson Show is your Twitter tweet at us
text the program will wrap it up straight ahead. MyPillow
right now has the incredible Mypello Classic indeed fourteen eighty
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(01:45:26):
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Benson Today mypellow dot com slash Benson, mypellow dot com
slash Benson. We will wrap it up straight ahead. It
is the Chad Bedzon Show.
Speaker 21 (01:46:12):
A hashtag me too, hashtag immigration reforms, hashtag help.
Speaker 24 (01:46:16):
I'm trapped in a hashtag factory and I can't get
out the Chat Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (01:46:22):
There may be a tear in your beer, so beware
hair hair.
Speaker 7 (01:46:27):
The Surgeon General's report calls alcohol use a leading and
preventable cause of cancer, saying drinking is responsible for nearly
one hundred thousand cancer cases in about twenty thousand cancer
deaths per year. That puts alcohol behind tobacco and obesity
as America's leading preventable cancer causes. The reports is consuming
it increases the risk of cancers in the mouth, throat, esophagus, liver, colon,
(01:46:49):
and in women breasts. The report recommends new warning labels
more explicitly tying alcohol use to that increased risk.
Speaker 2 (01:46:56):
Now you're saying to yourself, don't they already have alcohol labels?
Aren't those things updated? When it comes to those alcohol labels, the.
Speaker 7 (01:47:03):
Current government warning label on alcoholic beverages hasn't changed since
nineteen eighty eight. Warns of the risk of birth defects
if pregnant women consume alcohol, and says consumption impairs one's
ability to drive and operate machinery. The message also vaguely
warns of health problems, but the Search in General now
says the label should explicitly call alcohol use a cause
of cancer, similar to the warnings on packs of cigarettes
(01:47:25):
health problems.
Speaker 2 (01:47:26):
It's kind of like climate change doesn't matter which way
it goes. You're likeugh, this could cause stuff to happen
to you. So whatever happens, you're like adults, you but
they want specifics the old uh you know.
Speaker 3 (01:47:38):
Listen, here's my thing with studies like this.
Speaker 2 (01:47:41):
It's like with when I was a kid, grown up,
eggs bad for your cholesterol, horrible for you. Then later on, right,
it's okay for you. Then it was like now they're
bad again. Then like now they're good again. It was like, what,
there's good cholesterol. Back clack.
Speaker 3 (01:47:51):
We're figuring these things out now.
Speaker 2 (01:47:53):
But I thought, like a glass of wine every day,
like the Italians seem to live forever.
Speaker 26 (01:47:58):
The previous perception was that moderate or limited drinking one
a day for women and two for men had little
risk to your health or well being, but the Surgeon
General now says that simply is not the case for
cancer risk. He says one of every six to six
breast cancer cases, for instance, is attributable to alcohol consumption,
and he's now calling for that updated labeling on alcoholic
beverages to include a heightened risk of breast cancer, colon cancer,
(01:48:21):
and at least five other malignancies now linked to scientific
studies to alcohol consumption specifics.
Speaker 3 (01:48:28):
Is what they want on that?
Speaker 2 (01:48:30):
Don't tell me I'm much alcohols andn't it tell me
what it might do to me? How about just don't drink? No, Chad,
I know you're an adult. Do whatever you want. You
guys know I'm a tea tadler. Just put that out there.
I don't care what you do. But apparently, according to
them in this latest study, alcohol may be bad for you.
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three
(01:48:53):
at Chad Benson shows your Twitter tweet at his text
program right here on The Ted Benson Show. Solid fun
show today, and good start to the new year in
a bad way. I guess everybody needs to relax, take
a deep breath. I think this year is going to
be at times chaotic and potentially scary, but we need
(01:49:15):
to remember who we are as a nation. I think
it's a good thing that we get back to that.
And we got a new president that looks eerily similar
to an other president we used to have called Donald Trump.
Speaker 3 (01:49:29):
So he'll be here on January twentieth. That being said,
it doesn't mean it's a.
Speaker 2 (01:49:33):
Magical fix in that situation, so we'll see it's gonna
be wacky. You guys have a blessed weekend. We'll do
it again on a Monday Night. Not Jenue.
Speaker 1 (01:49:44):
This is the Chad Benson Show.