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September 20, 2024 109 mins
North Carolina GOP governor nominee vows to keep running after report on racial and sexual comments. Friday Sound Salad. Dr. Marty Makary talks about his new book Blind Spots. Harris speaks with Oprah at campaign event in Michigan. Shohei Ohtani makes history with MLB's first 50-homer, 50-steal season. Chad's NFL picks. Zach Abraham of Bulwark Capital Management. Data mining in social media. 
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:10):
Independent thoughts, independent life. This is Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
I don't know if it's true. Maybe it is, maybe
it isn't. But what the Republicans don't need, in particular,
Donald Trump is a wacka do? And is that what
we have in North Carolina? Do we have a wacka do?
Do we have a black nanzi who apparently likes tranny porn?
That's what he called it. Not me, don't get mad.
Maybe maybe it's all fake. I don't know. What I

(00:39):
do know is Trump doesn't need this. This isn't going
to help. And if you haven't heard Mark Robinson running
for governor, stuff was unearthed. C and N went to
him and kind of had a big interview with him,
and it has a lot to do with crazy porn
talking about how much he likes Hitler over Obama. I

(01:01):
mean it is. It is nasty, nasty, nasty.

Speaker 3 (01:05):
Lieutenant Governor Robinson. I think we'll just jump right into it.
Do you deny that this account is you?

Speaker 4 (01:10):
We absolutely do do.

Speaker 5 (01:12):
This is not us, These are not our words, and
this is not anything that is characteristic of me, nor
has it ever had, has it ever been? The people
here of North Carolina know I have been completely transparent
about my history, all the warts, and we put them
all out.

Speaker 4 (01:27):
We let folks know about it.

Speaker 5 (01:29):
The folks here also know my character, they know who
I am, they know my voice.

Speaker 4 (01:33):
This is not my voice. This is not things that
we would ever say or even think.

Speaker 2 (01:39):
It is a It's a hard thing in today's world
to say yeay or nay on anything like this goes
back to twenty ten, so this is before he was
even in politics any of that stuff. That being said,
it is not a good look, even if it's not true,
because as we know, in today's world, it doesn't matter
if it's true or not. Just try to label somebody
something and get them to believe it. Could it be true?

(02:02):
Of course it could? Could it also be fake? Yeah,
and that's sad. It's sad to think, yeah, maybe it
is true, maybe it's not. I don't know. I mean,
is it possible. People are weird, man, People are freaky.
People could be whackadoes. Let's be honest. But he did
some stuff allegedly on these sites that you just sit
there and go, really.

Speaker 3 (02:23):
How do you explain all of the matching details on
this profile? The profile on nud Africa lists your full
name as Mark Robinson. The email listed on an account
is an email that you have used elsewhere on the Internet,
including with your photo. You have used that name Mini
Soldier on multiple social media accounts, including Twitter. How can
you deny with all of these matching details, that this

(02:44):
is you.

Speaker 5 (02:44):
Look, I'm not going to get into the venutia of
how some might manufacture this, these selatious tabloid lies, but
I can tell you this just been over one million
dollars spent on me through AI by billionaire son who's
bound and determined to destroy me.

Speaker 2 (02:58):
I think that's Soros's kid.

Speaker 5 (03:00):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (03:02):
It's just a nasty look, it is, especially with the
state you need Trump and there's already been some controversy
around this guy, and he said some wacky things in
the past, But you need this state. You need every
state that you can get when it comes to the
battleground states, because things are tight, so freaking tight.

Speaker 6 (03:28):
A New New York Times SIENA poll shows Vice President
Kamala Harrison former President Donald Trump tie tiede nationally among
likely voters, each pulling forty seven percent. Looking specifically at
battleground Pennsylvania, which it all may come down to a
new CNN poll of polls shows no clear leader there.
Harris at forty nine percent, Trump at forty seven percent
essentially tied to there too.

Speaker 2 (03:48):
So that's good tide tide, but you need every state,
including North Carolina.

Speaker 6 (03:54):
Let's bring in Nate Silver, the founder of five thirty eight.

Speaker 7 (03:57):
I don't think we've ever seen such a close race.
All said, in battle ground states, our averages have Here's
probably have the same, pulling within two percentage points or less. Look,
it's probably intellectually to have very high turnout. It comes
down to just who has the better bigger coalition. Trump
has made some in roads with some groups, younger Hispanic voters,
younger Black voters. Democrats continued to gang ground in the suburbs.
They're going to have probably a more robust data and

(04:18):
turnout operation.

Speaker 2 (04:20):
Which is true. I think ground game is going to
be vitally important. And one of those ground games has
to be North Carolina, which Trump didn't win by a lot.
And you think normally it's a very conservative ish state,
not like you think in.

Speaker 7 (04:37):
A state like North Carolina in particular, it's mostly a
turnout state. You have fifty to fifty groups the GOP
side has been a little bit bigger a point bigger
so historically. But if you have something like Mark Robinson
that moves the polls by half a point, all of
a sudden that state becomes more interesting.

Speaker 2 (04:52):
And I think it's going to get a lot more interesting.
He's also apparently had his email and some other stuff
found on Ashley Madison with which is that site where
you go and I guess you have an affair. I
didn't even think that thing was still around. But this
is again there's a lot of this is going back,
you know, fourteen years. Is it real? I don't know,

(05:13):
he says, it's not.

Speaker 5 (05:14):
The things that people can do with the internet now
was incredible.

Speaker 3 (05:18):
You mentioned ar Are you saying that somebody was somehow
manufacturing biographical details to exactly match you using your username?

Speaker 4 (05:25):
Look, I have no idea how this was done. I
have absolutely no idea how it was done.

Speaker 5 (05:30):
And I have five weeks left in this campaign to
focus on the substantive issues at North Carolinius Face.

Speaker 4 (05:37):
I did not have time for tabloid trash.

Speaker 2 (05:40):
All that being said, last night was the night to
get out of the race. If you're going to get
out of the race, that was it. I mean, this
is you know, perfect timing right that it comes out yesterday.
But last night was the night where you could have
stepped out of the race and somebody else could replace you.
That was the last night that that could have happened.
And he said, no, let me reassure you. The things

(06:03):
that you will see in that story, those are not
the words of Mark Robinson.

Speaker 5 (06:08):
Folks, this race right now, our opponents are desperate to
shift the focus here from the subsiduent issues and focus
on what you.

Speaker 4 (06:17):
Are concerned with.

Speaker 5 (06:18):
Two selicious tabloid trash. Clarence Thomas famously once said he
was the victim of high tech lynchend.

Speaker 4 (06:25):
Well, it looks like Mark Robinson is too.

Speaker 2 (06:29):
We're going to find out. But why it's important is
Trump dorse the hell out of this guy, not just
endorse him in his user hyperbolic way. He went overboard.

Speaker 8 (06:40):
This is Martin Luther King on steroids. Okay, Now, I
told that. I told that. I told that to Mark.
I said, I think you're better than Martin Luther King.
I think you are Martin Luther King times two. And
he looked at me, and I wasn't sure.

Speaker 9 (07:01):
Was he angry because that's a terrible thing to say.

Speaker 10 (07:03):
Or was he complimented? I have never figured it out.

Speaker 2 (07:07):
So he's already had some issues. And this goes back
to the frustration that I have a lot of times
with Trump, is really like, this is the guy, and
I don't know if it's true or not. There was
already Look, this race was already close, and he had
already had several missteps. It's frustrating, man, It is frustrating

(07:28):
because it shouldn't be this hard. You want to know how,
I know because last night.

Speaker 11 (07:32):
A wife and mama law to senator to vice president,
please welcome Kamala.

Speaker 2 (07:41):
Horror, Oh my god, she did oprahsume whatever the hell
it was town Hall.

Speaker 12 (07:52):
Americans by character are people who have dreams and ambitions
and aspirations. We believe in what is possible, We believe
in what can be, and we believe in fighting for that.
That's how that's how we came into being, because the

(08:12):
people before us understood that one of the greatest expressions
for the love of our country, one of the greatest
expressions of patriotism is to fight for the ideals of.

Speaker 13 (08:24):
Who we are.

Speaker 2 (08:25):
What are you saying? What in God's name are you saying.
I can't tell if she's just nervous or if she's special,
or if she's not the sharpest doel of the shit.
I'm gonna go with number three and number one. I
think she gets nervous. She's on with Oprah in a

(08:46):
crowd that loves her, and she still delivers crap after crap.

Speaker 12 (08:51):
Which includes freedom to make decisions about your own body,
freedom to be safe from gun violence, freedom to have
access to the ballot box, freedom to be who you
are and just be, to love who you love openly
and with pride, freedom to just be. So this is
a moment where we stand knowing what we are fighting for.

(09:14):
We're not fighting against, it's what we're fighting for.

Speaker 13 (09:17):
Thank you, thank you, right right?

Speaker 2 (09:19):
It was beautiful. That was garbage, absolute freaking garbage. This
may have been the best and the visual is worth
it and I'll tweet it out in a little bit.
The look on her face when this couple asked her
a question, it was like, oh God, we.

Speaker 14 (09:38):
Really would love to know what your plan is to
help lower the cost of living.

Speaker 12 (09:42):
First of all, thank you both for being here and
yours is a story I hear around the country as
I travel in terms of both rightly having the right
to have aspirations and dreams, ambitions for your family, working hard,
and finding that the American dream is for this generation

(10:04):
and so many recently, far more elusive than it's been,
and we need to deal with that.

Speaker 13 (10:08):
There are a number of ways. One is bringing down.

Speaker 12 (10:10):
The cost of everyday necessities, including groceries.

Speaker 2 (10:14):
Never answers any of the questions, lots of words. It
shouldn't be this hard, yet you make it hard. Three, two, three, five,
twenty four, twenty three at Chet Benson shows your Twitter.
Happy Friday. So much stuff to get to today. We've
got a great interview coming up a little bit. Doctor

(10:36):
Marty McCarey joins the program. Very interesting new book. We're
going to talk a little bit about COVID doctor Fauci
Asie can fight Fauci. Very interesting. Indeed, just so much
stuff to get to today, including arguably the greatest night
in baseball history last night. We're going to talk about
that as well. But we're capital amazing right now. Free

(10:57):
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do you think may happen? You gotta know what's going
on in your account. Volatility it's there opportunities to make money.
How about getting a second opinion. It's a free risk
review with my buddies over at Bulwark. All you have
to do is call eight six six seven to seven
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(11:18):
they do. They're gonna take a look at your retirement
and show you, hey, look this is good, this is bad.
Whatever it is, maybe they'll tell you it's great. They
don't be asked. That's the beauty of Zach and his
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And that's not gonna cost you anything either. Call eight
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(11:40):
six seven seven nine Risks to get your free risk
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Radio dot com k and ow you Risk Radio dot com,
Investment Advisor Reservice Officer, the Truck Financial LLC and SEC
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advice or recommendations for any individual or specific security. Any
reference a miss of security so thought to be materially accurate,

(12:02):
and actual performance may Different investments involve risk. You are
not guarantee. Past performance is not guarantee feature results. Trut
two four to three zero eight. It's the Jad Benson Show.

Speaker 15 (12:19):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (12:21):
It is Friday, baby, you know what that means. Oh,
a little bit of music, a little bit of crazy
sound from the week. Oh, thank god, it's finally Friday.

Speaker 16 (12:32):
In quick succession, there were four shots, and then the
Secret Service was whisking him out of there, getting him
back to the clubhouse.

Speaker 17 (12:40):
And God has now spared my life. It must have
been God, Thank you, not once but twice.

Speaker 4 (12:47):
He was as calm as if he was going to
a Sunday pitch, not.

Speaker 10 (12:51):
A hundred dollars walking in my metal hole. I know
how I'll say it didn't.

Speaker 18 (12:56):
Body's burning a.

Speaker 19 (12:57):
Hold, got through my bugging in and then do my
skim Come on the morning, I'll be b's.

Speaker 20 (13:05):
Fire fire down free. I've done my motor running way again.
It's fine.

Speaker 21 (13:13):
They have the man behind bars, and hopefully he's going
to be there for a long time. Dangerous person, dangerous person.

Speaker 13 (13:19):
He's pretty crazy.

Speaker 22 (13:20):
I mean when I person met him, he was pretty crazy.

Speaker 18 (13:22):
I got a little sugar baby down the road and
she's sitting already and rocked in the angle.

Speaker 19 (13:29):
Look at circle stone and on that. We'll be working
all I doing all around things.

Speaker 20 (13:36):
It's fire that, fire free. I've done my motor running
lady again, it's fine.

Speaker 23 (13:44):
He is really to have done things like this before.
How could they be sure that they were going to
get to hes Bloss So lots of intelligence groundwork had
to go into this.

Speaker 4 (13:52):
Boost traps have all been hoaxes. Edward Swift comes out
against Trump.

Speaker 24 (13:58):
I don't care to be right back, but let's not
let this man have power again.

Speaker 13 (14:05):
It's a crime.

Speaker 25 (14:06):
Shame study wonder Wendy had a thirty hours slowly.

Speaker 26 (14:16):
Tunity as a legend the indictment to carry out this conduct.
Shawn Combs led and participated in a racketeering conspiracy that
used the business empire he controlled to carry out criminal activity.

(14:39):
Combs allegedly planned and controlled the sex performances, which he
called freak offs, and we often electronically recorded them.

Speaker 27 (14:47):
Not even a fifty million dollar bomb that could assure
him that Combs, wouldn't intimidate witnesses and wouldn't obstruct justice.

Speaker 2 (14:55):
It's the first time Aultny in his career has had
a three home run.

Speaker 28 (15:00):
Can you believe this?

Speaker 10 (15:03):
Ten runs batted.

Speaker 2 (15:04):
In for Oldtani.

Speaker 17 (15:05):
I'm the greatest of all time, maybe greater even than
Elvis because Elvis had a guitar.

Speaker 10 (15:10):
I don't have a guitar.

Speaker 2 (15:12):
He did have a guitar. That was true. Elvis had
a lot of things, no doubt about that. We're gonna
talk a little bit about Shoho Tani coming up when
I get the football picks the end of the hour,
because what we're witnessing in sports with him never been
done before ever in baseball, all the years they played baseball,

(15:33):
well over a century, nothing like it. Also, if you
think there's nothing like what he did, he has done,
you'd be wrong.

Speaker 29 (15:43):
It's potentially decades in prison if convicted, is charged, and
you have to look no further than another music icon
who faced similar racketeering charges, also accused of leading a
criminal enterprise, and that's our Kelly, who was tried and
convicted across the river in Brooklyn. He's serving a thirty
year sentence. That's potentially something in the offing for Sean Colmes.

(16:06):
He's fifty four now, I mean, it could well mean
the rest of his life behind bars.

Speaker 2 (16:10):
Yeah, I don't think he's ever gonna see the light
a day again. I just I just don't. And it
is because now more's coming out. You know, I talked
to yesterday. That wall is starting to crumble. People are
lwering your up. You're hearing all kinds of you know, rumors,
and there's some pictures already out of certain people and

(16:34):
you look and you think, oh my gosh. And then
there's disturbing footage of him and Justin Bieber, the people.
It's just this, I believe is going to get so
much worse. And you know, the salaciousness sucks you in,
but the lives that are really impacted, it's sad, it's
it's super frickin' and it's gross. I mean, one detective

(16:56):
said it's as bad, if not worse than Epstein. And
he had his sex dungeon three, two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show. That is
your Twitter, your Insta, all of the other things coming up.
Doctor Marty McCarey, remember him. We talked to him a
lot during Covid joins the Program's got a new book out,

(17:18):
and I'm gonna ask him, can you take Fauci in
a fight. I'm gonna I'm gooda because they're not pals.
I'm gonna tell you that right now. So many other
things you get to as well as show Heyo Tani.
I want to talk about that later too. It is
the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (17:36):
Son, Chad Benson, Joe, independent Thoughts, Independent life.

Speaker 15 (18:00):
This is Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (18:02):
I like talking about all kinds stuff, and I like
doing it with interesting people. This guy's pretty damn interesting.
We've spoken to before, back when Covid was crazy. He's
got a new book out. He's a doctor John Hopkins.
He's really a guy that gets it better than most
and I love watching his interviews. Doctor Marty McCarey joins
the show. New book Blind Spots, when medicine gets it

(18:24):
wrong and what it means for our health. I told
my wife she flipped out because she's super excited because
when I was showing her the stuff, she went through
a lot of because she's read some of your other
books and she's just over the moon about this stuff.
So let's talk about the fact that medicine has failed us,
because medicine's a business.

Speaker 10 (18:40):
But that's nice to hear about your wife. Yeah, good
to see, Chad. So the blind spots of modern medicine.
So there are these big issues we don't talk about
that we need to talk about. The modern medical establishment
is so busy billing and coding and medicating and operating.
We have lost sight of the fact that we have

(19:01):
witnessed the largest expansion of chronic diseases in human history.
The last fifty years. Half of our nation's children are
olbese overweight. A pedutrition would rarely see a case of
type two diabetes once in their career just a generation ago.
Now it's like a quarter of kids have diabetes or
pre diabetes. Autism's going up, autoimmune diseases, pancreatic cancer myfield,

(19:26):
the rates have doubled in the last twenty years. We
can't keep going down this path. We've got to talk
about our poison food supply, ultra processed foods. The medical
recommendations we've gotten perfectly backwards, like how to prevent peanut allergies,
we got that backwards. We just corrected that eight years ago,

(19:48):
we put out a lot of dogma. You know, there's
a lot of medical dogma. It takes on a life
of its own. It's not really supported by science. It's
just what a couple people at the top think, and
it's put out there like an edict, as if it's
scientifically based. So people need to know the truth. And
that's why I wrote the book.

Speaker 2 (20:07):
You know, you talk about penodalergies because you know, I'm
fifty three years old. When I was in school, we
had one kid who had a penodalergy. He had to
eat with the teachers and we got on with our lives.
Now everybody's got some sort of allergies and gluten, everybody's
allergic to something. What the hell happened?

Speaker 30 (20:23):
Man?

Speaker 10 (20:24):
In the year two thousand, the medical geniuses at the
American Academy of Pediatrics issued a recommendation to tell all
mothers to avoid all peanut, butter and peanut products for
kids zero through three years of age, thinking that would
prevent the child from developing pedid allergies. But they forgot
about a basic principle called immune tolerance or the dirt

(20:47):
theory parents had knowned as and so avoiding peanuts in
the first couple of years didn't prevent pedid allergies, it
caused them, and so penatalergi is just exploded. And as
more and more kids got allergic, then the medical establishment thought, well,
we got to double down. We got all these non
compliant moms, we got to stop these anti science people

(21:09):
from slipping peanut butter in, and so it got worse
and worse, and it just became this self licking ice
cream cone where it's this perpetual cycle of avoidance and
more sensitivities to it. And to this day we have
the worst pen analogy problem in the world. We have
not dug out of this crisis that is, by and
large a man made, ignited crisis from this arrogant recommendation

(21:34):
with no scientific support in the year two thousand. They
finally did the study in twenty fifteen, about eight years ago.
It came out showing they got it perfectly backwards.

Speaker 2 (21:43):
Well, of course, you know, they never like to apologize
or say oops. Talking to doctor Marty McCarry blind spots
new book When Medicine Gets It Wrong and what it
means for our health. You know, the food thing is,
we don't have a world anymore. Where we've crushed poverty globally,
but we produce a lot of stuff. We want stuff fast.

(22:06):
We no longer sit down at the table. You know,
everybody's work and everybody's you know, kids are playing soccer,
then they've got band, they're all doing stuff. We live
in a society now where it's go, go, go, and
we want it easy, easy, easy, and to produce the
way that we do. You know, I've told everybody this,
and I'm sure you know about this. You go, look,
the cigarette companies weren't selling cigarettes. They moved on from that.

(22:29):
They're selling addiction. And that's a lot of what this
stuff is.

Speaker 10 (22:32):
Yeah, my friend Kelly Means has done a nice job
educating the public about this. So our food supply has
these highly engineered addictive chemicals. They're designed so that when
you eat, you feel kind of a little full or
a little queasy full, but your hunger actually increases when

(22:53):
you eat these chemicals, and they put it in our
food supply, poisoning what kids are eating. And then we
scratch us heads and wonder what's going on here, and
we just medicate people. The immune system in the lining
of the gas Roo intestinal tract is reacting to all
these chemicals and seed oils and microplastics and pesticides and

(23:14):
all the heavy metals, all the ultra processed food, and
it's not this acute inflammatory storm. It's a chronic, low
grade inflammation. It's a reaction that's a low grade reaction,
and you get this chronic, constant inflammatory state that makes
you feel sick. You just feel low energy, you feel blah,

(23:36):
and then we don't know what to do with it
in medicines. We just throw meds at it. It makes
people depressed, it makes people feel down, and effects there.
Every organ in the body is affected by general body inflammation.
So we need to talk about food as medicine. We
need to talk about whole foods and getting back to

(23:59):
ingredients we could with one hundred years ago. What seed
oils are dangerous and what oils you should be cooking with,
and they should be cooking with extra virgin olive oil,
avocado oil, coconut oil, the healthy oils, not the manufactured
processed ones that are just chemicals with healthy sounding names
like vegetable oil.

Speaker 2 (24:19):
Yeah, no, it's right. I mean I think all of
us know we can eat a lot better, and we
also not active anymore. You know, when I was a kid,
it's like, you know, we talk about the you know,
kids are on the computer all day and they don't
really do much, and we don't let the kids go
outside and be free range and play. It's nuts. And
that is also something I think that needs to be
talked about that. You know, it's like, let your kids

(24:40):
go run around for ten hours.

Speaker 10 (24:42):
I like that free range. You know, we promote free
range chickens and free range cattle. We should be promoting
free range children right like people. They should be able
to roam. But we've done a terrible thing to kids.
We have told them that we need to break up
their circadian rhythms, wake them up at these crazy early hours,

(25:03):
put them on a school bus, have them sit sedentary
at a desk for seven hours a day, a lot
of times looking at a screen. We get them addicted
to social media and screens, and we feed them crap.
We feed them poison at lunch every day. I mean
bread that's not bread. It's stripped of its fiber and

(25:23):
chopped up and acts like sugar. And then we wonder
why they're sick and sad, and we put them on meds.
Twenty percent of kids now we're on medications. It's terrible.
And if they don't like it, if they disagree with us,
you know what we do. We diagnose them with oppositional
defiant disorder. Yeah, which is a real It might be

(25:44):
the most ridiculous of all the diagnoses in mental health.

Speaker 2 (25:48):
Well that's crazy, that is crazy, all right, So people
read the book. What do you want people to take
away from this?

Speaker 10 (25:54):
I want people to know the truth about health. There's
an amazing body of medical research that everyone should know about.
And when I share some of this new research on
the micro biome, on gut health, on hormone therapy, on
all these big topics, even my own colleagues at Johns Hopkins,
the doctors I'm friends with in all different specialties, they're

(26:16):
shocked by it. They don't even sort of lives in
the blind spots of modern medicine. And I just realized
this needs to be out there. The amazing work of
all these scientists doing amazing work on health needs to
be known. So that's why I wrote this. A lot
of us now we are going directly to the public.
A lot of people have been lied to by public

(26:37):
health officials and the medical establishments.

Speaker 2 (26:40):
Not a shocker. I mean like the COVID thing. I
mean your industry, and we talked to you during COVID.
The fact is is CDC, NIH, all of them, the FDA,
they lost a lot of trust with a lot of
people because you know, and you know, I mean Fauci
in particular. Could you take fauching to fight? I think

(27:01):
you could. I think you take him.

Speaker 10 (27:03):
I don't think he's going to be sending me a
Christmas card, No he's not.

Speaker 2 (27:06):
But they did. They lost a lot of it. And
so people look at the medical industry and especially when
it comes to government, is they just have zero trust.

Speaker 10 (27:17):
They have done a terrible thing. Trust in hospitals and
doctors was at seventy percent just before COVID. It's now
down to forty percent, a thirty point drop. With all
of the misinformation the government put out there, they were
the worst propagators of misinformation, silence descent. They did the
most dangerous thing a government can do. They pushed through

(27:38):
a new vaccine booster for young, healthy children and babies.
They fired the two vaccine experts at the FDA who
opposed its authorization. They forced kids to take it, and
silence doctors who raised concerns. That's the most dangerous thing.

Speaker 2 (27:54):
You get, absolutely scary. So people want to go, all right,
I got to get his book. Where do they go
get your book? Because I was just looking on Amazon
it says sold out.

Speaker 10 (28:01):
Yeah, they they it's sold. It's been. It's tied with
Hillary Clinton's new book for the top spot on the
New York So she's it. So hopefully people will buy
my book instead.

Speaker 2 (28:14):
Of absolutely by her.

Speaker 10 (28:15):
But no, you can still buy it on Amazon. They're
just going to have a one or two day delay
because of the incredible demand for it. But don't don't
let that temporarily out of stock notice stop anyone from
buying it on Amazon or anywhere else. It's available wherever
books are sold.

Speaker 25 (28:30):
You the man man.

Speaker 2 (28:30):
I love having you on doctor McCarey brand new book
out Go Get a blind Spot when medicine gets it
wrong and what it means for our health. Thanks so
much spending time with us today.

Speaker 10 (28:38):
Good to be with you, Chad again.

Speaker 2 (28:39):
I love talking interesting people. That guy super damn interesting
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Chad three two three, five, three eight, twenty four to
twenty three at Chadbentsons Show is your Twitter tweet at
us text the program talk a little NFL straight ahead.
I give you my predictions for the weekend. It didn't
go very well last weekend. It is the Chad Benson Show, serving.

Speaker 15 (30:16):
Up talk radio medium, rare and dripping with irony.

Speaker 1 (30:20):
It's Chad Benson one two toys there the other day.

Speaker 28 (30:26):
Thank you guys. What of a kind player won of
a kind season? So hey, Tony starts the fifty fifty club.

Speaker 2 (30:41):
I'm going to tell you this right now, not hyperbole.
Best player in the history of baseball is Sho Heo Tani.
Last night may have been the greatest single night in history.
He was six for six, three home runs, ten RBIs,

(31:03):
two stolen bases, four runs scored. My buddy Kenny, my bestie,
text me last night says, Hey, does your mom still
have tickets behind a home plate? I said, yeah, he
goes good, he goes show. Hey, I go, I get it,
and I go. Here's the scary thing. He's probably a

(31:27):
better pitcher.

Speaker 4 (31:30):
That's right.

Speaker 2 (31:33):
We're watching everything that the lore has built up about
Babe Ruth. We're watching it right here firsthand. And then
some fifty to fifty. He's got fifty home runs, fifty
stolen bases, and there's still time in the season to
get more. Absolutely, in freaking sane, even if you're not

(31:59):
a fan of baseball, he's worth the watch, no doubt
about that. This is Dave Roberts, the manager of the Dodgers,
talking about worth it.

Speaker 31 (32:10):
Yeah. You know what's funny is that I will say,
and I don't want to speak for Mark Walter, our owner,
but you know he's in finance, but I think he
got the best of return on investment with Shoe a
Otdi with the seven hundred million he did.

Speaker 2 (32:27):
But he lays it out here exactly who he is.

Speaker 31 (32:29):
What he did today was something certainly that I've never experienced.
It's never been done before in the two hundred years
of this game of Major League Baseball.

Speaker 4 (32:42):
So that in itself, you know, he's.

Speaker 22 (32:44):
One of one.

Speaker 2 (32:45):
He is one of one. Maybe a better pitcher hasn't
pitched this year because of his arm he had to
have surgery or his shoulder, maybe a better pitcher, So
think about that for a second. Going to be the
MVP because of the way he hits, and he may
be better on the mound. Crazy. Indeed, Hey, let's talk

(33:08):
a little and er air football. My picks sucked last week.

Speaker 3 (33:24):
For that.

Speaker 2 (33:24):
I apologize. Make it up to you this week. I
promise you that maybe kind of sort of, because you
never know. I could suck again. Last week was my
worst week of all the years doing this, and I
do it every Friday during football season. So I got
the Jets right yesterday. Man, Aaron Rodgers looks good. That
defense is really good. He plays like that. You never know. Giants,

(33:49):
Browns take the Browns, Saints, Eagles, Saints right now, Roland
hottest team in the NFLTIC Saints, Texans, Vikings, I'm going Texans, Broncos,
is Bucks, go with the Bucks, Packers, Titans. I'm going
with the Titans because I don't know who the quarterback
is gonna be for the Packers, Bears, Colts, I'm gonna

(34:09):
go with Colts. Chargers over the Steelers. Dolphins, Seahawks. Go
with the Seahawks, Raiders, Panthers. Panthers are a mess. Take
the Raiders, forty nine Ers, Rams, I've got the Niners, Lions, Cardinals.
I'm going with the Cards, Ravens, Cowboys going with the Ravens.

(34:33):
To get it done, We'll see Chiefs, Falcons go with
the Chiefs. And then Monday there's not one, but two games. Jaguars,
Bills go with the Bills, Commanders, Bengals go with the Bengals.
So there you go. There's your NFL picks. Baby three, two, three, five,
twenty four, twenty three at Sheadbenton Show. Is your Twitter

(34:54):
tweet at a text to program. Love hearing from every
single one of you. Man, It's just been a hell
of week. You know, it's talking about it earlier, we
were planning our you know, finally Friday sounds earlier. You
think about how the week started and in the news cycle.
So the news cycle started with Trump another assassination attempt,

(35:19):
another one, and then you know the fallout from that,
followed by Sean Combs and then quickly into what took
place in Lebanon. It has just been a hell of
a week. And what are we like forty four days

(35:40):
now till election time. God only knows what that's going
to look like. So much stuff to get to in
the second hour, including more on that crazy story out
of North Carolina with Mark Robinson who is running to
be the governor and apparently there's a lot of douty
things on the internet about him shocker, including the fact

(36:01):
that he's apparently a black Nazi. Is it real possibility?
Could it be? AI? Also a possibility with the world
of AI today, That's the scary thing. Three two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three. That Chad Benson Show is
your Twitter. If you're missing to the show, make sure
you grab the podcast. It is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (36:20):
This is the Chad Benson Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent life,

(36:50):
This is Chad Benson.

Speaker 5 (36:51):
Man.

Speaker 2 (36:52):
Did you see her being Kamla and Oprah last night?

Speaker 20 (36:56):
What a night?

Speaker 2 (36:58):
Huh got? Oprah asked a heart hitting question. I wonder
if she would give Trump the same opening she gave
Vice President Harris A.

Speaker 11 (37:08):
Wife and Mamla to senator to vice President, please welcome
Kamala horror.

Speaker 2 (37:20):
I think it would have been a Nazi fascist, uh
person who's just downright awful Donald Trump? Who were some
of the people that were there last night to support her?
So we have the cat ladies for Kamala.

Speaker 11 (37:38):
Here, rural Americans for Harris, caregivers for Kamala, train lovers
for Harris Waltz.

Speaker 13 (37:47):
I didn't know there were train lovers.

Speaker 2 (37:50):
Train lovers, Yeah, train lovers for wash Man. She knocked
it out the park last night, didn't she. She just
she nailed, Like you know what she's done. She walks out,
You goes that. Guys, what I tell you can't stop me.

Speaker 13 (38:05):
We really would love to know what your plan is
to help lower the cost of living.

Speaker 12 (38:10):
First of all, thank you both for being here and
yours is a story I hear around the country as
I travel in terms of both rightly having the right
to have aspirations and dreams, ambitions for your family, working hard,
and finding that the American dream is for this generation

(38:31):
and so many recently, far more elusive than it's been,
and we need to deal with that.

Speaker 13 (38:35):
There are a number of ways.

Speaker 12 (38:37):
One is bringing down the cost of everyday necessities, including groceries.

Speaker 2 (38:41):
So do you guys get that bringing down the everyday
cost of groceries? Oh, she's just she's nailing it. What
about the border?

Speaker 10 (38:48):
What will be specific steps to strengthening the border.

Speaker 13 (38:51):
So it's a wonderful and important question.

Speaker 2 (38:55):
I you know, my background prosecutor.

Speaker 12 (38:58):
As a prosecutor, and I was also the elected attorney
general for two terms of.

Speaker 2 (39:02):
Apporters transnationals, you got, so this is not.

Speaker 13 (39:07):
Issue for me. This is something I've actually worked on.

Speaker 12 (39:10):
I have prosecuted transnational criminal organization no way for the
trafficking of guns, drugs, and human beings. I take very
seriously the importance of having a secure border and ensuring
the safety of the American people.

Speaker 2 (39:27):
There you go, that's how'd she do it? Right there?
That's you know, nailed nailed it. What about guns? By
the way, speaking of guns, what if somebody breaks your.

Speaker 13 (39:33):
House a gun owner, does a god know that my
house a getting shot?

Speaker 2 (39:42):
Yes, yes, I hear that. I hear that.

Speaker 13 (39:45):
Probably should not have st that, But my will deal
with that later.

Speaker 2 (39:52):
Well, they may get shot, but it's not by you.
By the way, speaking of guns, I'm going to go
back a few years and remind everybody that she did
say this. If you're a gun owner, and.

Speaker 12 (40:00):
Just because she legally possess a gun in the sanctity
of your locked home doesn't mean that we're not going
to walk into that home and check.

Speaker 13 (40:08):
To see if you're being responsible, safe.

Speaker 22 (40:10):
And the way you conduct your affair.

Speaker 2 (40:11):
Okay, so just because I am a gun owner doesn't
mean that you don't have the right, apparently to come into,
as you said, the sanctity of my home, to make
sure that I'm doing everything correctly, solid, solid. Just you know,
that was a while ago. I'm sure she's changed. She
just again, it was a It was perfect. She went
on a show that was an OPRAH town hall, and

(40:34):
there wasn't anything hard about it, and she still managed
towards salad.

Speaker 12 (40:39):
Americans, by character, are people who have dreams and ambitions
and aspirations. We believe in what is possible, We believe
in what can be, and we believe in fighting for that.
That's how that's how we came into being, because the

(41:00):
people before us understood that one of the greatest expressions
for the love of our country, one of the greatest
expressions of patriotism, is to fight for the ideals of
who we are.

Speaker 2 (41:13):
What are you talking about again? I said it last hour.
I don't know if she is just really nervous. I
don't know if she is playing stupid or is playing
stupid some of you out there to say she's played stupid.
You know, my wife and I got into it yesterday.
We're talking about her because my wife can't stand her voice,

(41:33):
and I said, you know what she is. She's a
political chameleon and a political survivor. She's willing to do
what it needs to take to elevate herself. And when
you listen to her, you're like, man, never has somebody
with so little done so much. It is fascinating.

Speaker 12 (41:50):
Which includes freedom to make decisions about your own body.
Freedom to be safe from gun violence, freedom to have
access to the ballot box, freedom to be who you
are and just be, to love who you love openly
and with pride, freedom to just be. So this is
a moment where we stand knowing what we are fighting for.

(42:13):
We're not fighting against, it's what we're fighting for.

Speaker 2 (42:16):
Thank you, Thank you.

Speaker 32 (42:18):
Dam By driving out that's just you said nothing you said,
nahthing you you just throw out these It's about freedom.

Speaker 2 (42:30):
Freedom to love who you love. Freedom to dance where
you want to dance, dance like you've never ever been
seen that you're on your own. Freedom to to you know,
jump high, to sing this from the loudest part of
your lungs, freedom to walk the streets and know that
as you're walking the streets, you're walking with the freedom
of fridge.

Speaker 13 (42:49):
What are you saying?

Speaker 2 (42:51):
Nothing, That's what you're saying. Three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benton's show, is your
Twitter that has text the program? Then you've got the
other side of it. Donald Trump not getting good news yesterday.
He needs North Carolina along with the other swing states
and the guy running the guy he backed. The guy

(43:13):
he said was Martin Luther King on steroids barely. There's
a lot of stuff out of that's bad. And by bad,
I mean awful, and by awful, I mean horrific if true,
if true. Mark Robinson back in twenty ten on a
bunch of adult sites said things like he believed in slavery,
and stuff about Hitler and how Hitler was better than Obama,

(43:33):
and how he likes, you know, tranny sex as he
called it. Don't blame me, I didn't say it. He's
not getting out the race.

Speaker 4 (43:42):
I'm not going to get into the venutia of house.

Speaker 5 (43:45):
I might manufacture this the silacious tabloid lies, but I
can tell you this just been over one million dollars
spent on me through AI by billionaire son who's bound
and determined to destroy.

Speaker 2 (43:55):
Me, bound and determined to destroy you. Several of you
have texted me and said, Chad, do you think this
stuff is true? I don't know, unfortunately, with today's world,
and we're gonna get into a little bit more next
hour with what you can do with AI and stuff.
Is it possible it's true? Oh, one hundred percent, it's possible.

Speaker 4 (44:16):
It's true.

Speaker 2 (44:16):
Is it true? I have to come at everything with it, Yes,
but maybe not. I don't know. What I do know
is this can't be the best we have, right, This
can't be. I mean, I just you know, so you've
got Trump, by the way, didn't He's endorsed the guy,

(44:37):
but last night they weren't too like, Hey, this is fantastic,
stay in here. You know, didn't get behind him as
much as I think he has in the past. And
I don't blame Trump because Trump didn't know about any
of this stuff, because I think, look, if Trump would
have endorsed this guy knowing all this stuff, that would
have been, you know, just ridiculous. But you did endorse him.

Speaker 33 (44:56):
This is not what any Republican and a critical battle
ground state wants to see when we are just about
forty five days out from Little Bember election. And so
the Trump campaign put out this statement and they say
that North Carolina is vital to Donald Trump's chances of
winning back the White House in November. They do not
mention Mark Robinson by name, but Trump did endorse him

(45:20):
back in March. He even praised him, comparing him to
Martin Luther King Junior.

Speaker 2 (45:24):
Yeah, but he didn't know everything, you know. I mean,
I can't blame him for not knowing this guy's past.
But you would have thought that they would have done
some super due diligence, right, They would have some of
those forensic web guys going deep to find any of
this stuff if it were true. I don't know if
it's true. What I do know is is this the
best we can do? There are only bad options.

Speaker 4 (45:44):
It's about finding the best one.

Speaker 10 (45:45):
You don't have a better bad idea than this.

Speaker 4 (45:47):
This is the best bad idea we have.

Speaker 2 (45:49):
Sir By far Well, you go three, two, three, five, eight,
twenty four to twenty three atch Advnson shows youre Twitter
tweet as text the program Rayconn Past Year about the
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When it comes to cost, they start well under one
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Raycon dot Com slash Chad. It is the Chad Beenson Show.

Speaker 15 (47:05):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 34 (47:07):
Israeli warplanes pummeling Southern Lebanon, striking hundreds of rocket launchers
in response to Hesbelah launching its own missiles, killing two
Israeli soldiers. The Israeli military strikes following forty eight hours
of unprecedented explosive pager attacks on Hesbela operatives that left

(47:28):
dozens dead and thousands wounded.

Speaker 2 (47:31):
Man, think about all those people over the other, terrified
of anything that has to do with phones, pagers, anything
like that. Even if yours didn't explode, you know, you're
getting rid of them.

Speaker 34 (47:48):
The leader of Hesbela, Hassan Nosrala, today calling it.

Speaker 35 (47:51):
An act of war.

Speaker 2 (47:53):
But as he spoke, Israeli.

Speaker 34 (47:56):
Warplanes roared over Beirut.

Speaker 2 (47:58):
R Marcus Moore was.

Speaker 36 (47:59):
There were two huge sonic booms that shook the buildings here.
People screamed, and clearly the tension is high all over Lebanon.

Speaker 2 (48:07):
You think absolutely, and this entire process, this isn't an
overnight thing. That's the thing that's crazy. We've talked about before.
When it comes to Israel. They're playing chess. Everybody else
is playing checkers, and they think both micro and macro.

(48:29):
They see the small details and the little things and
they see the big picture.

Speaker 34 (48:34):
We're learning Israel began planning for a supply chain attack
like this fifteen years ago. An intelligence source confirms to
ABC News that Israel created shell companies to manufacture and
eventually sell the pagers to Hesbelah. The source confirming that
one to two ounces of explosives were planted in the

(48:54):
pagers with a remote trigger switch to set.

Speaker 10 (48:58):
Off the blasts.

Speaker 2 (48:59):
Fifthteen years, Think about that, fifteen years they've been planning this.

Speaker 36 (49:06):
I've talked to a couple of e Lebanese people here
today and who told me that they're scared that these
events have left them even more on edge. Since the
October seventh attacks. In the war that has followed, people
here in Beirut, in particularly southern Lebanon, have faced many
days of uncertainty and of tension.

Speaker 2 (49:30):
Yeah, well, what do you think was going to happen?
I mean, you have to know even though you're somebody
who's just you have nothing to do with Hesbela, Right,
you're stuck in this situation where you're living Lebanon, you're
in Beirut, you have nothing to do with Hesbelah. You
don't care either way about Israel. You may not be
a fan, but you're just trying to live your life.

(49:51):
And October seventh happens and you think shit because you
know what's coming, Because if you don't know anything about Lebanon,
it's kind of split into north and South, and they've
kind of seated an area to Hesbelah and they let
them do their thing, and the rest of the country's

(50:11):
just trying to survive. And it's not doing a damn
good job. I'll tell you that right now, Project twenty
twenty five. Speaking of doing a job, they are just
not giving this up, are they. They're just they're coming
hard for Trump and Project twenty twenty five. It's nine
hundred plus pages long, and they're like, this is Trump's masterpiece, Like, no,

(50:36):
he didn't write it, and he's sure in the hell
didn't read it.

Speaker 37 (50:39):
Later today, Senate Democrats will hold a press conference to
expose Donald Trump's Project twenty twenty five for what it
actually is. Trump's Project twenty twenty five is the most harmful,
most unhinged, and most extreme conservative agenda in recent American history.
By now, many Americans have heard about Project twenty twenty five.

(51:00):
More people learn about Trump's plan, the more they realize
how disastrous it would be for our country.

Speaker 2 (51:05):
Yeah, yeah, it's I have not read the entire thing
because it's way long. You can go get several synopsises,
and it is so what they do, right, So they
put together think tanks, put together all of these things
of what a conservative government should do or what a

(51:27):
liberal government should do. And out of all of these things,
most of them are just super benign and very conservative
things that would if Trump was not involved, nobody be
paying attention to it. And they're turning this into a boogeyman.
Facts are, none of this stuff is going to happen.
It's just I mean, and some of it's just it's

(51:48):
just regular conservative stuff. But they that way they can
point to it. And the same thing with the liberals.
Liberals have their think tanks and they do this stuff.
And the hope is you go, you you work for
these think tanks, and maybe you get an opportunity to
you know, you're going to run one down the field
and see what happens, and you'll call somebody at the
author of that section of it and say, hey, you know,
it's just all about how do we do it? But

(52:10):
it's the boogeyman that is Project twenty twenty five, and
they're trying to pin this on Trump. And again it's
nine hundred plus pages. We know he didn't read it.

Speaker 37 (52:18):
I could speak about Project twenty twive every morning for
the remainder of the work period, and you'll still not
have enough time to cover all the nasty things hiding
inside this agenda for middle class families, Project twenty twenty
five will raise taxes by three thousand dollars, caters to
the ultra wealthy by giving people who earn more than
ten million dollars a one point five million dollar tax break.

(52:39):
For worker, Project twenty twenty five will undermine overtime peck,
resulting in less pay for longer hours for middle class
Americans who work hard and often have to work more
than forty hours a week.

Speaker 2 (52:50):
And what did Trump say over the last week. He
wants to not tax overtime. Oh, not tax overtime. It's
the boogeyman. And it's a good look. They're doing a
great job job in some ways of putting it out there,
but most people have no idea what the held Project
twenty twenty five is.

Speaker 37 (53:08):
And for our border secure, Project twenty twenty five rejects
the bipartisan plan we released earlier this year. The strongest
bipartisan border is security measure in decades. It also adopts
a policy of utterly cruel mass deportations with little or
no do process, and even risks to porting three million dreamers.
How cruel to port three million dreamers? It's in Project

(53:31):
twenty twenty five.

Speaker 2 (53:33):
Yeah, well, none of those things are happening. But hey,
you keep scaring everybody because modern politics. The playbook's simply this.
I could try to convince you, but I'd rather scare you.
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson Show is your Twitter tweet at
us text the program. A lot of stuff still to

(53:53):
get to. Our buddy, Zach Abramchie investment officer Bord Capital
is going to join us later on in the hour.
We'll talk a little. Sean Pede it he comes.

Speaker 4 (54:02):
Oh my god.

Speaker 2 (54:03):
It just gets weirder every day, doesn't. It's a Chad
Benson shown.

Speaker 1 (54:12):
Chad Benson, Joe, independent Thoughts, Independent life.

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

Speaker 4 (54:59):
Come on.

Speaker 2 (54:59):
That's kind of funny. Something that took off literally like
a cat. The eat in the dogs, the eat in
the cats, they're not the eat in the dogs. They didn't.
The eat in the cats me now so bizarre.

Speaker 13 (55:18):
What are we doing?

Speaker 2 (55:21):
How did we get here? I couldn't tell you. Here's
something I can tell you. If you get something for free,
write a service, let's say social media, you are not
the end product. No no, no no no no no

(55:41):
no no no no, you are the product.

Speaker 38 (55:44):
Awake a call to the public and the consumer that
you need to take action and be aware of what
information you're potentially giving up in order to leverage free services.
You can almost bet that if you're using a free service,
that you're giving up something to have that service.

Speaker 2 (56:00):
Yes, and we bring this up because well reports you're
out that guess what. Data mining is so big and
it is so important. As one person puts it, it's
the new goal.

Speaker 14 (56:17):
The more I learn about this, I find it's such
a violation of privacy.

Speaker 24 (56:20):
It just makes me angry.

Speaker 14 (56:22):
But to tell you a little bit more about this,
the companies we're talking about are TikTok, YouTube, Amazon and
several others. They're basically watching our every move that's according
to the report. They know our relationship status, how much
money we're making, what we like to buy, even our
health conditions. And it's all information that's sold to a
third party. And it's really all about making money.

Speaker 2 (56:42):
No, yeah, all about making money. Not a shock, kids,
We've talked about that for a long time. You're getting
it for free. You think this is awesome. I'm getting
this for free. You're not. You're just not paying for
it now, but you will.

Speaker 14 (57:00):
It was all the way back in December of twenty
twenty when the ftc order companies like Amazon, Facebook, and
YouTube to provide data on how they collect and use
personal information. What they found was disturbing, to say the least.
The report stating their finding show quote how the tech
industry is monetization of personal data has created a market
for commercial surveillance, especially via social media and video streaming services,

(57:24):
with inadequate guardrails to protect consumers. It goes on to say,
they track what we read, what websites we visit, whether
we are married and have children, our educational level and
income bracket, our location, our purchasing habits, our personal interests,
and in some cases even our health conditions and religious faith.

Speaker 39 (57:42):
Data is sort of the new oil, as they like
to say, that information that gets compiled and it's valuable
to a lot of companies that are trying to sell you.

Speaker 2 (57:51):
Things and that's the most important thing, and they want
all the data they can get every thing. You know,
my uncle and I when we first started doing our
stuff a long time ago, one of the things that
they were working on at the time is they knew

(58:14):
how to collect the data, they didn't know what to
do with it. And now years later, I mean we
were talking about it then and this I would say.
You know, Jack was probably two, he's fourteen. Now they're like, look,
this is what we can do. I can tell you,
based on the data on your phone on average, the

(58:35):
time of day you're in a certain place, what the
shops are around you, and I could send you deals
from those shops every single day if you frequent a
certain shop, almost on a daily basis. Through all the
information I gather, I can send you coopin's an hour
before you're thinking about doing something. Therefore, pushing it that way,

(58:56):
and that was excite, being subtle and scary.

Speaker 14 (59:01):
It's a fact most people are aware of, but the
links to which the companies go have some people troubled.
The report says a status quo right now is unacceptable,
with platforms allowed to continue collecting such information unchecked. Some
companies even partnering with outside data collection firms to figure
out what we're doing offline.

Speaker 39 (59:19):
Say that you log into the app, you have location
services that are enabled, and you go to the Starbucks
to get a cup of coffee. Everybody now knows that
you go Starbucks, and you're gonna start getting targeted ads
on your social media feeds for Starbucks. And it's not
just Starbucks, it's not just one social media app. It's
sort of all of them working together.

Speaker 14 (59:35):
As far as solutions, the report urged Congress to pass
federal privacy legislation to safeguard users, and called on companies
to self regulate their use of AI and internal algorithms
to stop violations on user privacy.

Speaker 2 (59:49):
Well, we have to ask ourselves though, because we opted
into everything now that's before you know. It's like if
you start smoking today, you know, the risk gets out there.
If you were smoking forty years ago, they were lying
to you. Would you pay a couple bucks a month

(01:00:09):
to not have your data? See, the problem is nobody
believes that. Nobody believes that because even if they want
your data, you may say to a Facebook or I'm
just using whoever, I'll pay you five bucks a month
don't collect my data. But if they want to get
your data, they can go to somebody else. So that's
the issue at that point in time. So we could

(01:00:30):
sit here and say you need to do this and
you need to do that, but in truth, what are
they going to do? And of course you're going to
get the big media companies. By that, I mean the
social media companies who not only are going to push
back right say they're doing everything. But understand they all
say to everybody, we want more regulation because more regulation.

(01:00:50):
And I don't know how many times I tell you
guys this more regulation, which like people like democrats have
more regulation kills competition, it squashes it. So they want
to make it expensive and tough for other companies to
get in their industry. They enjoy it, but they're pushing back.

Speaker 40 (01:01:13):
In a statement, Google, which owns YouTube, says it has
the strictest privacy policies in the industry, doesn't sell people's
personal information or so personalized ads based on sensitive information.
We reached out to Meta, It declined to comment, and
TikTok didn't respond to request for comment. But TikTok and
Meta had been touting revamped security features for younger users.
Instagram this week rolled out stricter security settings for teens accounts.

(01:01:36):
The FTC those urging Congress to do.

Speaker 2 (01:01:38):
More and I don't, yeah what we're going to pass
a bypar legislation. It's it's it doesn't matter. They're going
to get your information because you're not going to click
something where you should have clicked something. That's the way
this goes.

Speaker 17 (01:01:54):
You have to.

Speaker 2 (01:01:56):
It's sad that it's all or nothing. And my hope
is in the future sooner rather than later, there's going
to be things that will live off of We don't
collect your data. We don't want to know about your
data that is yours. But if you think it's just

(01:02:17):
your Starbucks order or those kind of things that targeted ads,
think about the health stuff, because maybe more important than
anything else right now is health information three two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three. At Chad Benson's shows, your
Twitter tweet at as Texs the program, it's about the

(01:02:39):
Benjamin's baby. That's what I'm trying to tell you. I
it's gold, it's diamond, it's all of the things. They're
data mining for your life, for my life, for everybody's life,
and the sad thing is even if you turn your
phone off, you're geolocator and everything else. There are ways
or her Yes, there is three two, three, five, three eight,

(01:03:03):
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson's show, is
your Twitter, tweet atis text the program love hearing from
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ffgreens dot com slash Chad Roughgreens dot com slash Chad
or call eight eight eight ninety my dog eight eight
eight ninety my dog At Chad Benson Show. Twitter C
H A, D B E N S O n our
man Zach Abraham, chief investment Officer, Bull Capital Joints. The
program talk about rate cuts, the market, economy, Chad Benson.

Speaker 41 (01:04:30):
Show, hashtag me too, hashtag immigration reforms, hashtag help.

Speaker 15 (01:04:45):
I'm trapped in a hashtag factory and I can't get out.

Speaker 4 (01:04:49):
The Chat Benson Show is that.

Speaker 2 (01:04:50):
Time of the week. We took a little bit of
the economy of their man, the met the legend. He
is Zach Abraham, Chief vestment Officer, Board Capital. All right,
let's let's talk Turkey. I know if you're aware of this,
they cut rage yesterday. I thought it would be a quarter.
I think a lot of people did. He's very conservative,
in his world, and it wasn't that.

Speaker 4 (01:05:12):
No.

Speaker 22 (01:05:13):
I would say, for the vast majority of the past
two three weeks, looking at the data and looking at
the way the market priced in interest rate futures, we're
of the belief would be twenty five basis points as well. However,
the futures markets really started to swing last Friday, and
then over the weekend, a guy who's sort of become
the communicator, if you will, Nick Timoreos, who covers the

(01:05:37):
FED via the Wall Street Journal, and then Bill Dudley,
former FOMC member, put out op eds that were really
bringing the fifty BIPs into question. So, going into the
appointment yes or going into the meeting yesterday, you had
great futures markets pricing sixty five percent chance I want
to say, have a fifty basis point hike or cut.

(01:05:57):
And so for the last three or four days we said,
holy smokes, it looks like they're going to fifty. And
the reason we were so sure about that chat is simply,
if you look at the if you look at the
last twenty five years, there's only been one FED rate
hike or cut decision that did not correspond with what
the market had priced in there were a couple times,
and that's a little disingenuous because there were a couple

(01:06:19):
times where they cut more like this. But when you
see the market swing that much in that shorter period
of time, and you see Dudley and tim areos coming
out and kind of wink wink, alluding to the fact
that's on the table, that's kind of sort of the
way for the Fed to float it out there so
they don't catch the market completely off guard. Now I

(01:06:40):
think a lot of this is just nonsense. I think
a lot of this is just garbage. But you know,
at the end of the day, you want to make
sure you get it right, and that's kind of why
we came into the day expecting fifty basis points and
we got it.

Speaker 2 (01:06:51):
Talking to Zach A. Bram, Chief Vestment Officer Board Capital,
all right, So for the average person, obviously, spig because
rates coming down, that's a helper, credit card, ar car,
all the stuff. It's huge for that part of it.
But the market itself, what's to do for the market.

Speaker 22 (01:07:06):
I'd say a big part of it, especially with this cut,
is probably just psychological, meaning you've built market participants and
you can look at this in so many different ways,
but market participants and justifiably so, have become so much
more aware of the FED. You I mean, go back
twenty five years ago. There was never this cut.

Speaker 2 (01:07:27):
Nobody know what the FED was.

Speaker 22 (01:07:29):
No, oh no, nobody paid nearly as much this attention
to it, certainly not retail investors. But you've built up
this path lovian response where for fifteen years we watched
a market with pathetic growth, as a matter of fact,
the worst growth we've ever had coming out of a recession,
which was post eight oh nine. And yet despite the
fact that there wasn't real economic performance, asset prices just

(01:07:52):
went like this, and we quickly realized of what, you know,
how many fingers the FED can put on the scale
and sort of engineer wealth, right, sort of engineer prosperity.
That's scary, and that's effectively what they've been doing, right,
and so when they ring. But here's the other crazy part,

(01:08:12):
and I think that this market response for seeing today
makes all the sense in the world. We're doing something
we've never done, including in COVID, meaning we are now
entering a hiking cycle at record highs in asset prices,
whether it be markets, you know, stocks, equities, private equity
homes right ret large, and we're doing that while growth

(01:08:38):
and inflation are above trend, and we're doing that while
we're running record deficits. When you put all that together,
not only do I think this move today makes sense,
I think the market's moving a lot higher makes sense.

Speaker 2 (01:08:54):
That's awesome.

Speaker 22 (01:08:56):
Well, yeah, I mean now I am not sheer leading
the economy. People need to realize. I'm not talking about
the economy and the long term health of the American
dream or the long term health the American economy. I'm
just telling you when you see if you walk into
somebody's house and you see them handing out Snickers bars
in Coca Cola to a bunch of ten year olds,

(01:09:17):
you're not gonna bet that everybody in the house is
going to be asleep within forty five minutes. Right, So
when you see what's currently going on with the FED,
with deficits, with all this stuff, it doesn't add up
to a market crash.

Speaker 2 (01:09:30):
Now, it's common sense, common sense. Talking to Zach Abrahm,
CHI investment Officer Board Capital. So that being said, you
know people are going to ask it's this political you know,
is there a politic politicality you know, is there some
sort of politics involved in this? Obviously it's hard not
to think that. And then other people are asking the
question is are we going to get another one? Is
this this set us up for another one or two

(01:09:50):
before the end of the year.

Speaker 22 (01:09:52):
Look, I don't know whether it's political or not. The
Fed is going to tell you as long as the
day you know, they're going to tell you to stay.
We are a political where very political. Well, we know
they're not right. I completely understand why people believe it
is political. But it goes back to looking at the data. Meaning,
you know, we thought there was going to be a

(01:10:13):
fifty point cut because that's what the market was pricing, right,
That's the only reason. When we looked at the underlying data,
you don't see it there. I mean again, you've got
growth and inflation above trend, unemployment south of four point five.
We've actually seen several inflation indicators ticking up over the
last three to three months or so. So when you
look at the data, there's no reason for it. Then

(01:10:35):
you realize there's an election. Then you also realize that
the Federal Reserve is part of a system, and that system,
by and large is allergic to the idea of Donald
Trump being in power. I think it's I think it's
totally reasonable to think this is politically motivated. I don't
see a fundamental reason for it. So yeah, I think
I think it very well could be. I'm not prepared
to stand up here and say it is. I don't

(01:10:56):
know that to be true. I don't have a bat
phone connecting me to you know, Chair Powell's desk, and
you know he didn't tell me.

Speaker 2 (01:11:01):
But the reality is, if your common sense says, hey,
look there's something to this. Are we going to get
another one or two before the end of the year.

Speaker 22 (01:11:09):
Market's pricing another fifty bit cup before the end of
the year?

Speaker 2 (01:11:12):
Sweet mother of God?

Speaker 22 (01:11:14):
Yeah no, I And again I think people people need
to realize too. This is in the backdrop of running
seven percent deficits, which is just insane. And I'm not
telling you to get out there crazy long in the
stock market. What I will say, and I might rust
saying this, I might regret saying this, But when you
add up all these inputs, it's really hard to make

(01:11:35):
the argument that you think asset prices are going down.

Speaker 2 (01:11:38):
Yeah, that's true. They pop money in, they play with it,
they've got their fingers on the scale off not justice,
but the economy. You see how it goes. Zach Abram,
chief investment Officer, Bull Capital. People want to reach out
to you because they're not et it's and they're like, hey, Zach,
I heard you do a free risk review. You got
your webinar coming up? How do we do it?

Speaker 22 (01:11:52):
Yeah? So Buwarcapitalmanagement dot com. You can just google Know
your Risk radio dot com. We're very easy to find.
We got our webinar coming up next Thursday. Can sign
up for that free by going to our website. But
We'recapitalmanagement dot Com. We're obviously going to talk about all this,
but we're also going to say, look, there's a bunch
of wonderful ways to protect you. We're going to talk
about gold stocks chat. I think there's an opportunity in

(01:12:13):
gold stocks and commodity stocks in general that I've never
seen in my career, and I think there's wonderful ways
to take advantage of this and more importantly, protect yourself.
So hopefully people will pay attention.

Speaker 2 (01:12:25):
You're the friggin man. Love it brother, You have a
go one. We'll talk to you next week, all right, man?

Speaker 22 (01:12:28):
Fun as always thanks for having me.

Speaker 2 (01:12:29):
Investment Advisor, Reservice Officer, the Truck Financial LLC and sec
Register Investment Advisor. The opinions expressing this programmer for general
informational purpose online and are not intend to provide specific
advice or recommendations for any individual or specific security. Any
reference or performance and security so thought to be materially
accurate and actual performance may different. Investments involved. Risking are
not guaranteed. Past performance is not guarantee future result. Stretch
two four to three zero way, third hour, Straight Ahead,

(01:12:50):
Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:12:53):
This is the Chad Benson Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent Life.

(01:13:23):
This is Chad Benson.

Speaker 35 (01:13:25):
Dancing the Chuck shot with her partner Ezra Sussa. It's
Anna Delvin.

Speaker 2 (01:13:38):
That right there is Dancing with the Stars. Who is
Anna Delvi inventing Anna the con artist that went to prison.
She's on Dancing with the Stars and you know what,
she's also under house arrest. And yes, kids, she has
an ankle monitor. First of all, the ankle monitor matches

(01:13:58):
your out there perfectly.

Speaker 13 (01:13:59):
I think this is the first time.

Speaker 2 (01:14:00):
That the costumers here had to do that. Were you
impressed by what they did?

Speaker 35 (01:14:05):
Yes?

Speaker 12 (01:14:05):
Yes, I think They were very happy about the opportunity
to bedazzle.

Speaker 13 (01:14:11):
My ankle monitor.

Speaker 2 (01:14:12):
Very excited about the opportunity to bedazzle the ankle monitor
that matched her outfit.

Speaker 12 (01:14:20):
Kids, are you at all intimidated or nervous?

Speaker 42 (01:14:24):
I mean, what's the worst that can happened? Then I'm
gonna arrest me for dancing badly.

Speaker 2 (01:14:30):
Not only did she spend a bunch of time in jail.
When she was in jail, she remember remember what she did.
She pretended to be some sort of heiress, like some
sort of you know, aristocrat, and she got a ton
of money from banks. It wasn't millions, it was hundreds
of thousands of wire fraud check frauds. She stole from

(01:14:51):
regular people. Became a big thing. It was inventing Anna.
I think it was on Netflix. Then she goes to
jail for four to twelve years. She didn't spend all
that much time in there, but when she wasn't there,
she was not a model citizen. She even spent time
at solitary for fighting. And now she's on Dancing with
the Stars. Marca. Speaking of America, you guys haven't heard

(01:15:12):
of a guy named Mark Robinson. Well, he's running for
governor of the Great State of North Carolina's lieutenant governor,
and apparently he and I say apparently, has gone on
to some websites. Now, this isn't by all looks lately.
It's been several years. In fact, some well over a
decade plus. But on those websites, oh Nelly, pornographic of nature. Yes,

(01:15:38):
it's the things he said on those things that make
people uncomfortable, like calling himself a black Nazi. He is black,
by the way, talking about the fact that he liked
Hitler over Obama.

Speaker 3 (01:15:49):
We can go on and on, Lieutenant Governor Robinson. I
think we'll just jump right into it. Do you deny
that this account is you?

Speaker 4 (01:15:55):
We absolutely do.

Speaker 20 (01:15:57):
This is not us.

Speaker 5 (01:15:58):
These are not our words, and this is not anything
that is characteristic of me, nor has it ever had,
has it ever been. The people here of North Carolina
know I have been completely transparent about my history.

Speaker 4 (01:16:11):
All the warts.

Speaker 5 (01:16:12):
We put them all out, We let folks know about it.
The folks here also know my character, They know who
I am, They know my voice.

Speaker 4 (01:16:19):
This is not my voice. This is not things that
we would ever say or even think.

Speaker 2 (01:16:23):
Really, it is not your voice.

Speaker 12 (01:16:25):
Huh h.

Speaker 2 (01:16:28):
I don't know if it is or isn't his voice,
and we'll get to that in a second.

Speaker 3 (01:16:32):
How do you explain all of the matching details on
this profile? The profile on New to Africa lists your
full name as Mark Robinson. The email listed on an
account is an email that you have used elsewhere on
the Internet, including with your photo. You have used that
name Mini Soldier on multiple social media accounts, including Twitter.
How can you deny, with all of these matching details,

(01:16:53):
that this is you.

Speaker 5 (01:16:53):
Look, I'm not going to get into the venutia of
how some might manufacture this. Dese selacious tabloid lies can
tell you this. There's been over one million dollars spent
on me through AI by a billionaire son who's bound
and determined to destroy me.

Speaker 2 (01:17:08):
I think we know that's Soros. The stuff on here
is damaging because Trump needs this. Trump backed him back
to the point where he said, and I don't shy
away from this stuff because let's be real. Trump has
picked some doozies in the past. There is a reason
that they lost the Senate see herschel Walker, and we
go on and on about some of the doozies he's

(01:17:30):
picks in the past. Now, I don't blame Trump for
any of the bad stuff that nobody knew about up
until yesterday and CNN brought it out. But what did
Trump say about this guy? Well, he kind of, you know,
talked about the fact that, hey, this guy is the
most incredible person in the history of the world, and
uh yeah, mentioned Martin Luther King.

Speaker 4 (01:17:54):
This is Martin Luther King on steroids.

Speaker 10 (01:17:58):
Okay, Now, told that.

Speaker 2 (01:18:00):
I told that.

Speaker 9 (01:18:02):
I told that to Mark. I said, I think you're
better than Martin Luther King. I think you are Martin
Luther King times two. And he looked at me, and
I wasn't sure.

Speaker 8 (01:18:14):
Was he angry because that's a terrible thing to say,
or was he complimented.

Speaker 2 (01:18:18):
I have never figured it out. No hyperbole there, Right,
Trump needs really needs all the swing states because he's
going to lose one or two him but he needs
to be as close as possible. In North Carolina. It's
gonna be damn close. It is, I mean, right now,
it is kind of it's a toss up.

Speaker 10 (01:18:39):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:18:40):
I saw yesterday the guy from Northwestern who's the great picker,
said that Trump's gonna get boat raced. Anything's possible. She
could get boat raised. I mean you just here last
night with Oprah.

Speaker 4 (01:18:53):
It just.

Speaker 2 (01:18:55):
Frustrating. But this stuff on here is damning. And last
night was the asked opportunity to get out of the
race and to be replaced by somebody there was a
chance trumping them, didn't endorse him anymore, didn't push him anymore,

(01:19:22):
but didn't mention him when he talked about the state.

Speaker 5 (01:19:25):
Well, let me reassure you the things that you will
see in that story, those are not the words of
Mark Robinson. Folks, this race right now, our opponents are
desperate to shift the focus here from the subsident issues
and focus on what you are concerned with.

Speaker 4 (01:19:41):
Two selections, tabloid trash.

Speaker 5 (01:19:44):
Clarence Thomas famously once said he was a victim of
high tech Lynchend.

Speaker 4 (01:19:48):
Well, it looks like Mark Robinson is too.

Speaker 2 (01:19:51):
Oh my lord, is he right again? I don't know.
I don't know, I don't know. We've got breaking news right.

Speaker 6 (01:20:01):
Now, another shocking story coming out of Lebanon that's breaking
right now. Two days ago, pagers belonging to members of
Hesbela were simultaneously detonated, and yesterday walkie talkies all over
the country began exploding in another wave of what appears
to be Israeli retaliations, but just moments ago, in a
truly surreal twist, the rectums of goats all over the

(01:20:22):
country exploded at the same time, killing an additional oney
eight hundred people and injuring thousands of others, as well
as killing countless goats.

Speaker 2 (01:20:30):
I cannot believe. I mean, this is chaos going on
right now in the Middle East. That is insane.

Speaker 6 (01:20:36):
CNN International News correspondent Kevin Brown is following the story
on the ground in Tel Aviv.

Speaker 22 (01:20:42):
Thanks Jake.

Speaker 43 (01:20:43):
Tensions are running high right now all over Lebanon as
everything seems to be exploding, leaving members of Hesbela scrambling.
First it was the pager bombs, yesterday, walkie talkies, and
now we're hearing just in the last hour, it's the
goats that are exploding, leading to skyrocketing death tolls. While
it's still speculative, it's hard to believe that the IDF
isn't behind all of these incidents.

Speaker 2 (01:21:06):
If you guys want to know something that's not real,
that's AI. So could it be AI. It's possible, It's
absolutely possible. Could it be real? Again, very possible. The
reality is with AI today. You don't know. You can
play it that way. Everybody who's done something wrong has

(01:21:27):
some plausible deniability, and everybody who they want to get
on either side can use AI to manipulate. I don't know,
I don't No, they didn't really blow up goats. Peter
be all pissed off. Oh jeez, just chaos. I'm done

(01:21:52):
with it, kids, I'm done with it. I need to relax,
I need to rest, and you to take a deep breath.
We're gonna do a little what's trending straight ahead. Got
a great in of you coming up as well. Doctor
Mardi McCarry's going to join the program. Talk to him. Plus,
we're going to talk about Sho Heo Tani was last
night arguablieve the greatest single offensive performance in baseball history

(01:22:18):
from maybe and I'll say this not maybe the best
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Com slash Chad. What's trending Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 15 (01:23:38):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:23:40):
Now it's time to find out what's trending. What's trending?
It's signed James.

Speaker 30 (01:23:46):
Dean, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Sera, what trumping?

Speaker 2 (01:24:08):
Let's find out what's trending on this beautiful Friday, shall
we where do we start? Start with Twitter? Oprah last
night the town hall boy was at a tough town hall.
I swear we'll play some more of the hilarity. You know,

(01:24:30):
what do you say about comin? She's just gonna go
to a friendly places. You know what's funny is Trump
would have done a town hall like that, knowing full
well he's walking into a lion's den. And she was there,
and just the look on her face for some of
the questions too, was spectacular. Good Friday trending Olivia Newsy.

Speaker 4 (01:24:52):
Who she she is a.

Speaker 2 (01:24:53):
Reporter that how should we say this? I had a
relationship with the rfk jr. Also while reporting on him.
I don't know if you're supposed to do that. My
feeling is probably not, you think, probably not. Aaron Rodgers
trending last night, Otani the Great baseball Player, Meryl Streep,

(01:25:18):
Black Nazi. We talked about that throughout the day. Head
over to Yahoo, Olivia, Nuzi, Oprah and Kamala iPhone sixteen Trump,
Harris Pohle, Sho Heo, Tani, Russia, Ukraine War Jets, Patriots

(01:25:41):
and then final the gup Mark Robinson that's the Black
Nazi Patriots. Jets, Sho Heo, Tani all trending, Oprah and
Kamala Metallica Tour twenty five. Yeah, all trending. The black

(01:26:04):
Nazi thing is spectacular. If you guys haven't heard Mark
Robinson running for governor of North Carolina, so apparently he
was on a bunch of websites that were how should
we say this adult in nature and this you know,
some of the stuff that's on there is horrific. There's

(01:26:26):
no doubt about that. And he was asked about yesterday.

Speaker 3 (01:26:28):
Lieutenant Governor Robinson. I think we'll just jump right into it.
Do you deny that this account is you?

Speaker 4 (01:26:33):
We absolutely do. This is not us.

Speaker 5 (01:26:36):
These are not our words, and this is not anything
that is characteristic of me, nor has it ever had,
has it ever been. The people here of North Carolina
know I have been completely transparent about my history, all
the warts, and we put them all out. We let
folks know about it. The folks here also know my character,
they know who I am, they know my voice.

Speaker 4 (01:26:57):
This is not my voice. This is not things that
we would ever say or you can think.

Speaker 2 (01:27:01):
So what has been said that he's a black Nazi
is one of the things that has been said. He's
on several sites including nud Africa. Never heard of that
one used his full name and this on this go
back to twenty ten, and he used the moniker that

(01:27:21):
uses everywhere many soldier on several different things, including his YouTube.
His discord is Pinterest, Pinterest, Pinterest. He is no followers
by the way Pinterest according to this. But some of
the other stuff, including stuff about because he's fiercely against transgender,
and just some of the stuff he said about what

(01:27:41):
he would like to do to transgender which isn't violence
if you know to mean?

Speaker 3 (01:27:45):
How do you explain all of the matching details on
this profile? The profile on nude Africa lists your full
name as Mark Robinson. The email listed on an account
is an email that you have used elsewhere on the internet,
including with your photo. You have used that name Mini
soldier on multiple social media accounts, including Twitter. How can
you deny with all of these matching details that this

(01:28:06):
is you.

Speaker 5 (01:28:06):
Look, I'm not going to get into the minutia of
how I might manufacture this these selacious tabloid lies, but
I can tell you this. There's been over one million
dollars spent on me through AI by a billionaire son
who's bound and determined to destroy me.

Speaker 2 (01:28:20):
I think he's talking about Soros. The reality is you
can do a lot of different things today. He has
said some wacky things in the past, and you can
do a lot of different things. And this is the
thing about AI that we always worry about is, and
I've said this for a while. Right now, the videos
they're not You see them, and they're great because you
can do that at your house. I mean, imagine the

(01:28:41):
stuff that you can do now just out of your
off your phone, which is incredible, but they're still not
ready for primetime. But the voice that right there is
the scary part of it.

Speaker 22 (01:28:55):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:28:55):
Do I know that he did any of these things?
I have no idea. And that's the issue. You don't
know if he did or didn't do these things based
strictly on the voice.

Speaker 4 (01:29:05):
The things that people can do with the internet now
is incredible.

Speaker 3 (01:29:09):
You mentioned Aari. Are you saying that somebody was somehow
manufacturing biographical details to exactly match you using your username?

Speaker 4 (01:29:17):
Look, I have no idea how this was done. I
have absolutely no idea how it was done.

Speaker 5 (01:29:22):
And I have five weeks left in this campaign to
focus on the substantive issues that North Carolinius face.

Speaker 4 (01:29:28):
I do not have time for tabloid trash.

Speaker 2 (01:29:32):
Well, I don't know if it's him or not, but
it's just that the whole thing is odd. And this
is the sad thing about today's world, with all of
the stuff that's available. Is Is it him? Absolutely? Posibly?

Speaker 13 (01:29:48):
Could be him?

Speaker 2 (01:29:48):
Maybe for sure? No, I don't know, because we see
what politics is like today. I mean, yesterday we were
playing that AI stuff with Gavin Newsom as he signed
that law. Well, there's a reason for that. Do I
lean that this might be him?

Speaker 4 (01:30:05):
Maybe?

Speaker 2 (01:30:06):
But it's just so hard to tell, and everybody rushes
in to pick a side or to defend something, and
then when it turns out to be wrong, it's too late.
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three
at Chad Benson Show. Is your Twitter tweet at us
text the program. Love hearing from all of you. Doctor McCarey,
you might recognize that name. A lot of stuff we

(01:30:29):
did with him when COVID was going crazy. It's got
a new book out. We're going to talk about that
bunch of stuff, including whether or not he can beat
up Fauci. That's right, mm hmmm. Chad Benson, Joe Son,
Chad Benson, Joe.

Speaker 1 (01:31:06):
Independent Thoughts, Independent Life. This is Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (01:31:12):
I like talking about all kinds of stuff, and I
like doing it with interesting people. This guy's pretty damn interesting.
We've spoken to before, back when COVID was crazy. He's
got a new book out. He's a doctor John Hopkins.
He said, he's really a guy that gets it better
than most and I love watching his interviews. Doctor Marty
McCarey joins the show new book blind Spots, When medicine

(01:31:33):
gets it wrong and what it means for our health.
I told my wife she flipped out because she's super
excited because when I was showing her this stuff, she
went through a lot of because she's read some of
your other books, and she's just over the moon about
this stuff. So let's talk about the fact that medicine
has failed us, because medicine's a business.

Speaker 10 (01:31:51):
That's nice to hear about your wife. Yeah, good to see, Chad.
So the blind spots of modern medicine. So there are
these big issues we don't talk about that we need
to talk about. The modern medical establishment is so busy
billing and coding and medicating and operating. We have lost
sight of the fact that we have witnessed the largest

(01:32:12):
expansion of chronic diseases in human history. The last fifty years.
Half of our nation's children are obese, overweight. A pedutrition
would rarely see a case of type two diabetes once
in their career. Just a generation to go. Now it's
like a quarter of kids have diabetes or pre diabetes.
Autism's going up, autoimmune diseases, pancreatic cancer myfield, the rates

(01:32:36):
have doubled in the last twenty years. We can't keep
going down this path. We've got to talk about our
poison food supply, ultra processed foods, the medical recommendations we've
gotten perfectly backwards, like how to prevent peanut allergies, we
got that backwards. We just corrected that eight years ago.

(01:32:57):
We put out a lot of dogma. You know, there's
a lot of medical dogma. It takes on a life
of its own. It's not really supported by science. It's
just what a couple people at the top think and
it gets put out there like an edict, as if
it's scientifically based. So people need to know the truth.
And that's why I wrote the book.

Speaker 2 (01:33:16):
You know you talk about penodalergies because you know, I'm
fifty three years old. When I was in school, we
had one kid who had a penodalergy. He had to
eat with the teachers, and we got on with our lives.
Now everybody's got some sort of allergies and gluten, everybody's
allergic to something. What the hell happened?

Speaker 4 (01:33:33):
Man?

Speaker 10 (01:33:33):
In the year two thousand, the medical geniuses at the
American Academy of Pediatrics issued a recommendation to tell all
mothers to avoid all peanut butter and peanut products for
kids zero through three years of age, thinking that would
prevent the child from developing pedia allergies. But they forgot
about a basic principle called immune tolerance or the dirt

(01:33:56):
theory parents had known it as, and so avoiding peanuts
in the first couple years a like didn't prevent pediadalergies.
It caused them. And so penaalergies just exploded. And as
more and more kids got allergic, then the medical establishment thought, well,
we got to double down. We got all these non
compliant moms, we got to stop these anti science people

(01:34:18):
from slipping peanut butter in and so it got worse
and worse, and it just became this self licking ice
cream cone where it's this perpetual cycle of avoidance and
more sensitivities to it. And to this day we have
the worst pena analogy problem in the world. We have
not dug out of this crisis that is, by and
large a man made, ignited crisis from this arrogant recommendation

(01:34:43):
with no scientific support in the year two thousand. They
finally did the study in twenty fifteen, about eight years ago.
It came out showing they got up perfectly backwards.

Speaker 2 (01:34:52):
Well, of course, you know, they never like to apologize
or say oops. Talking to doctor Marty McCarey, blind Spot,
it's a new book when medicine gets it wrong and
what it means for our health.

Speaker 3 (01:35:03):
You know.

Speaker 2 (01:35:03):
The food thing is, we don't have a world anymore
where we've crushed poverty globally, but we produced a lot
of stuff. We want stuff fast. We no longer sit
down at the table. You know, everybody's work and everybody's
you know, kids are playing soccer, then they've got band,
they're all doing stuff. We live in a society now

(01:35:25):
where it's it's go, go go, and we want it easy, easy, easy,
and to produce the way that we do. You know,
I've told everybody this, and I'm sure you know about this.
You go, look, the cigarette companies weren't selling cigarettes. They
moved on from that. They're selling addiction. And that's a
lot of what this stuff is.

Speaker 10 (01:35:41):
Yeah, my friend Kelly Means has done a nice job
educating the public about this. So our food supply has
these highly engineered addictive chemicals. They're designed so that when
you eat, you feel kind of a little full or
a little queasy full, but your hunger actually increases when
you eat these chemicals, and they put it in our

(01:36:04):
food supply, poisoning what kids are eating. And then we
scratch our heads and wonder what's going on here, and
we just medicate people. The immune system in the lining
of the gas Roo intestinal tract is reacting to all
these chemicals and seed oils and microplastics and pesticides and
all the heavy metals, all the ultra processed food. And

(01:36:27):
it's not this acute inflammatory storm. It's a chronic, low
grade inflammation. It's a reaction that's a low grade reaction,
and you get this chronic, constant inflammatory state that makes
you feel sick, You just feel low energy, you feel blah,
and then we don't know what to do with it.
In medicines, we just throw meds at it. It makes

(01:36:49):
people depressed, It makes people feel down and effects their
Every organ in the body is affected by general body inflammation.
So we need to talk about food is medicine. We
need to talk about whole foods and getting back to
ingredients we cooked with one hundred years ago. What seed

(01:37:12):
oils are dangerous and what oil you should be cooking with,
and they should be cooking with extra virgin olive oil,
avocado oil, coconut oil, the healthy oils, not the manufactured,
processed ones that are just chemicals with healthy sounding names
like vegetable oil.

Speaker 2 (01:37:27):
Yeah, no, it's right. I mean I think all of
us know we can eat a lot better, and we
also not active anymore.

Speaker 4 (01:37:32):
You know.

Speaker 2 (01:37:32):
When I was a kid, it's like, you know, we
talk about the you know, kids are on the computer
all day and they don't really do much, and we
don't let the kids go outside and be free range
and play. It's nuts And that is also something I
think that needs to be talked about. That you know,
it's like let your kids go run around for ten hours.

Speaker 3 (01:37:51):
I like that.

Speaker 10 (01:37:51):
Free range. You know, we promote free range chickens and
free range cattle. We should be promoting free range children, right, well,
they should be able to roam. But we've done a
terrible thing to kids. We have told them that we
need to break up their circadian rhythms, wake them up
at these crazy early hours, put them on a school bus,

(01:38:14):
have them sit sedentary at a desk for seven hours
a day, a lot of times looking at a screen.
We get them addicted to social media and screens, and
we feed them crap. We feed them poison at lunch
every day. I mean bread that's not bread. It's stripped
of its fiber and chopped up and acts like sugar.
And then we wonder why they're sick and sad, and

(01:38:36):
we put them on meds. Twenty percent of kids now
we're on medications. Well, it's terrible. And if they don't
like it, if they disagree with us, you know what
we do. We diagnose them with oppositional defiant disorder. Yeah,
which is a real It might be the most ridiculous
of all the diagnoses in mental health.

Speaker 2 (01:38:56):
Well that's crazy, that is crazy, all right. So people
read the book. What do you want people to take
away from this?

Speaker 10 (01:39:02):
I want people to know the truth about health. There's
an amazing body of medical research that everyone should know about.
And when I share some of this new research on
the microbiome, on gut health, on hormone therapy, on all
these big topics, even my own colleagues at Johns Hopkins,
the doctors I'm friends with in all different specialties, they're

(01:39:23):
shocked by it. They don't even sort of lives in
the blind spots of modern medicine. And I just realized
this needs to be out there. The amazing work of
all these scientists doing amazing work on health needs to
be known. So that's why I wrote this. A lot
of us now are going directly to the public. A
lot of people have been lied to by public health

(01:39:45):
officials and the medical establishments.

Speaker 2 (01:39:47):
Not a shocker, I mean, like a the COVID thing.
I mean your industry, and we talked to you during COVID.
The fact is is CDC NIH, all of them, they
have DA. They lost a lot of trust with a
lot of people because you know, and you know I
mean Fauci in particular. Could you take Vaucie and fight

(01:40:08):
I think you could. I then you take him.

Speaker 10 (01:40:10):
I don't think he's going to be sending me a
Christmas card.

Speaker 2 (01:40:13):
No he's not.

Speaker 4 (01:40:14):
But they did.

Speaker 2 (01:40:15):
They lost a lot of it. And so people look
at the medical industry and especially when it comes to government,
is they just have zero trust.

Speaker 10 (01:40:24):
They have done a terrible thing. Trust in hospitals and
doctors was at seventy percent just before COVID. It's now
down to forty percent, a thirty point drop. With all
of the misinformation the government put out there, they were
the worst propagators of misinformation, silence descent. They did the
most dangerous thing a government can do. They pushed through

(01:40:45):
a new vaccine booster for young, healthy children and babies.
They fired the two vaccine experts at the FDA who
opposed its authorization, They forced kids to take it, and
silence doctors who raised concerns. That's the most dangerous thing
you can absolutely scary.

Speaker 2 (01:41:03):
So people want to go, all right, I got to
get his book. Where do they go get your book?
Because I was just looking on Amazon it says sold out.

Speaker 10 (01:41:09):
Yeah, they they it's sold. It's been It's tied with
Hillary Clinton's new book for the top spot on the
New York So she's it, so hopefully people will buy
my book instead of absolutely by her. No, you can
still buy it on Amazon. They're just going to have
a one or two day delay because of the incredible
demand for it. But don't don't let that temporarily out

(01:41:31):
of stock notice stop anyone from buying it on Amazon
or anywhere else. It's available wherever books are sold.

Speaker 2 (01:41:37):
You the man man. I love having you on Doctor
McCarey brand new book out Go Get a Blind Spot
when medicine gets it wrong and what it means for
our Hell. Thanks so much spending time with us today.

Speaker 10 (01:41:45):
Good to be with you, Chad.

Speaker 2 (01:41:46):
It's a freaking damn interesting book, and check it out.
I think you guys would be impressed. And you know,
joking aside about the you know, can you can you take?
Can you can you fight? Fauci? The reality is is
this guy he gets it a lot more than most
ever did, and he was not afraid during COVID to

(01:42:07):
speak his mind. It probably sleeps well at night, as
would you when you have Mypellow products, which are amazing.
What a segue there, Chet, I know, right, my Pellow
right now has amazing things like the six piece incredible bathouseet.
So this towel set is incredible long shurfer cotton, right,

(01:42:28):
so it's a long staple shurf for cotton. It's super absorbent,
super comfortable. The six piece towel set's only twenty five bucks.
They've got deep discounts on everything for the mattress toppers
to the premium mypillows to the Geezer dream sheets, but
the six piece towel set, you're not gonna get anything
close to this. Just twenty five dollars. Super absorbent, super soft, incredible,
ten year warranty, six day money back guarantee, all of

(01:42:52):
these things on deep discount right now. This is what
I want you to go to mypellow dot com slash Benson.
Mypellow dot com slash Benson, save big, but check out
the six piece towel set on sale now for just
twenty five dollars. Go there, go go go go right now,
go go go go just twenty five bucks my pillow
dot com slash Benson. Let's wrap it up straight ahead.

(01:43:12):
It is that Chad Benson.

Speaker 42 (01:43:13):
Shure running with scissors sounds great compared to this.

Speaker 2 (01:43:27):
Say, it is that time of the week, that's Friday
for those you're not keeping score. Where we sit back, relaxed,
listen to his music and some crazy sound that took
place this week. My goodness, how did it start?

Speaker 4 (01:43:39):
In quick succession?

Speaker 16 (01:43:40):
There were four shots and then the Secret Service was
whisking him out of there, getting him back to the clubhouse.

Speaker 17 (01:43:47):
And God has now spared my life. It must have
been God, Thank you, Not once but twice.

Speaker 4 (01:43:53):
He was as calm as if he was going to
a Sunday pitch.

Speaker 10 (01:43:57):
Ad dollars bold.

Speaker 20 (01:44:00):
I know what I said. Anybody's burning a hole.

Speaker 19 (01:44:04):
Through my pargeting and doing my skin. I'm on the morning,
I'll be brown. It's fine, fined down, free, I'm.

Speaker 20 (01:44:15):
Done my motor running again. It's fine.

Speaker 21 (01:44:19):
They have the man behind bars and hopefully he's going
to be there for a long time. Dangerous person, no
dangerous person.

Speaker 22 (01:44:25):
He's pretty crazy.

Speaker 13 (01:44:26):
I mean when I first met him, he was pretty crazy.

Speaker 31 (01:44:28):
I got a.

Speaker 10 (01:44:28):
Little sugar baby down the road and.

Speaker 18 (01:44:31):
She's sitting on already and rocked in the hog on
lodats ever.

Speaker 19 (01:44:36):
The stone, and later on that we'll be working on
doing all the whole things right.

Speaker 20 (01:44:42):
It's firing that fire free I'm done my motor running again.
It's fine.

Speaker 23 (01:44:49):
He is really to have done things like this before.
How could they be sure that they were going to
get to head bloss So lots of intelligence groundwork had
to go into this boost.

Speaker 10 (01:44:58):
Stretch have all been hoaxes.

Speaker 34 (01:45:01):
Edward Swift comes out against Trump.

Speaker 24 (01:45:03):
I don't care if they write that, but let's not
let this man have power again. It's a crime.

Speaker 20 (01:45:11):
Shame Dudy.

Speaker 2 (01:45:19):
We slowly tunity.

Speaker 26 (01:45:33):
As a legend of the indictment to carry out this conduct.
Shohn Combs led and participated in a racketeering conspiracy that
used the business empire he controlled to carry out criminal activity.
Combs allegedly planned and controlled the sex performances, which he
called freak offs, and he often electronically recorded them.

Speaker 27 (01:45:52):
Not even a fifty million dollar bomb that could assure
him that Combs wouldn't intimidate witnesses and wouldn't obstruct justice.

Speaker 2 (01:45:59):
It's well, the first time Old Tony in his career
has had a three.

Speaker 28 (01:46:03):
Home run game.

Speaker 10 (01:46:05):
Can you believe this?

Speaker 2 (01:46:07):
Ten runs batted in for Oldtani.

Speaker 17 (01:46:09):
I'm the greatest of all time, maybe greater even than Elvis,
because Elvis had a guitar.

Speaker 10 (01:46:15):
I don't have a guitar.

Speaker 2 (01:46:16):
Oh my god, what a week, right. I started out
with an assassination attempt on Trump, and it's like we
have moved on because fifty gazillion things happened. I mean
with less than twenty four hours. We had Sean Diddy Combs,
did he do it? I think he did? And so
many other things. Just a crazy, wacky looney week three, two, three, five, three, eight,

(01:46:37):
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson's show. Is
your Twitter, your Instagram, all of the other things, And
there's plenty of other things out there. Last night we
witnessed some history and if you weren't paying attention, let's
go over it a little bit again.

Speaker 4 (01:46:55):
One two O. Tanis the other.

Speaker 28 (01:47:00):
Good, one of a kind player, one of a kind season.

Speaker 20 (01:47:09):
So hello, Tony starts the fifty fifty club.

Speaker 2 (01:47:15):
Yeah, the fifty fifty club. We'll get to that in
a second, which brings us though.

Speaker 4 (01:47:22):
To this, and then I go and spoil it all
by saying something stupid.

Speaker 2 (01:47:27):
We'll take stupid pills this morning.

Speaker 35 (01:47:29):
It's the honest ones you want to watch out for,
because you can never predict they're gonna.

Speaker 2 (01:47:33):
Do something incredibly stupid.

Speaker 13 (01:47:36):
Now you're the fact. Stupid one with the big mouth
is stupid little time.

Speaker 4 (01:47:42):
You should never underestimate the predictability of stupidoting. Now it's
time for stupid information.

Speaker 2 (01:47:53):
We got plenty of it for you. Last night we
witnessed history. We'll touch on that in a second. Otani
had ten RBIs. That's uns batted in. For those of
you not keeping score, who had the most in Major
League Baseball history, Well, it's shared by two people. Nineteen
twenty four, Jim Bottomley of the Saint Louis Cardinals had twelve,
and Mark Whitten of Saint Louis in nineteen ninety three

(01:48:15):
also drove in twelve. But last night was crazy. And
if you are not like maybe you're not a big
baseball fan, I will tell you this. I like baseball,
but I this time of the year is great. That's
I enjoy the playoffs and stuff. What we're witnessing with
Shoheo Tani, the player for the Dodgers, is something we

(01:48:39):
have never seen before. Fifty home runs, fifty stolen bases,
and oh, by the way, quick reminder to everybody, he
may be a better pitcher than he is a hitter.
And he had to had surgery, so he hasn't pitched
at all this year. That is insane. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three Chad Benson Show

(01:49:01):
to Twitter, your Instagram, all of the other things. Solid
fun show this week. As always, we are off Monday
and Tuesday. We're back Wednesday. I'll tell you why we're
off on Wednesday and why we're off for a couple
of days because we are traveling. Where are we going
You will find out soon. I promise you that you
have a blessed rest of your day and have a

(01:49:22):
great weekend. We'll talk to you on Wednesday night, night Jack.

Speaker 15 (01:49:27):
This is the Chad Benson Show.
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