Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
Independent thoughts, independent life. This is Chad Benson.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
What matters is policy. That's it. Trump is screwing this
up because he's trying to make it personal. We'll get
to that a little bit later. Policy matters more than
anything else, and the number one thing is the economy. Yesterday,
the slip in the stock market, I expect a little
bit of a bounce back. But are we headed to recession?
(00:37):
We've been going like gangbusters for quite a while. We
are still the envy of the world when it comes
to our economy. But could I see a recession coming
in the future. Yeah, And those of you who wish
your recession because you want your party to win, you're
an ass hat. But could we be headed there? Yeah,
it's definitely a possibility. It's no doubt, not just us. Globally,
(00:58):
there's a lot of issues going on. The nie K,
which is the Japanese stock market, bounced back today pretty good,
but there's no doubt that there's fears jitters in the
market because of what potentially could be happening with Iran
and Israel. But policy should matter. When Trump makes it personal,
(01:20):
he gets frustrated, he gets pissed, he goes sideways, it
doesn't work. The other night, he's in Georgia. What's he do?
Goes after Brian Camp pretty popular in Georgia. He is
the guy that Trump blames for the reason he lost
in twenty twenty. And this guy's had died in the
wool Conservative and you're going after him. There's no reason
(01:42):
to go after him. As I said a thousand times
and I'll say it again, you're not fixing twenty twenty.
You did not build a time machine. You cannot go
back and fix the thing that you thought happened. You
didn't win any of your court and the average person
(02:04):
doesn't give a rats ass about your grievance of what
happened in twenty twenty. All they care about is what
is taking place today. There's no trophy for twenty twenty.
If you were to find out today magically you won,
you don't get installed as president. There's no mechanism to
do that. So all you can do is talk about
(02:27):
the future. The past is the past, Go forward, talk
about the future. What do people care about? They care
about economics, the economy. How do the polls have you?
Quite good?
Speaker 3 (02:40):
Still? In a new poll, just twenty five percent of
registered voters said they'd be better off financially under a
president Harris Well, nearly half said they'd be better off
on their a second Trump term.
Speaker 2 (02:51):
That's a win. It's an MSNBC poll see an end.
Speaker 4 (02:56):
That's really important because some things in this race have
not changed the idea that you would be better off
financially if Trump were elected. Trump still has a big
advantage over now Kamala Harris on that, and the idea
that his policies would slow or decrease the number of
migrants trying to cross the border, that he still has
(03:16):
an edge on.
Speaker 2 (03:18):
So you make it about that. Whenever they ask you
a question, Hey Trump, are you a racist? Your answer
should be I care about the American people. The economy
is full of struggle. We have a wide open border
that is ridiculous. We need to fix both of these
things and get us righted. We also need to pay
attention about what's going on around the world because we
may get sucked into something and we can't afford to
(03:41):
do that financially, and we don't want to put our
people at risk. So let's focus on those things. Hey Trump,
what do you think of your vice president saying mean
things about cat ladies I care about, as does he.
Where we're going. When it comes to inflation, immigration, we
get from point A to point B. We make a
(04:02):
change that changes me. We move forward. We move forward
by getting rid of some of these regulations, starting to drill,
make sure that we have enough oil and gas that
we're not beholden to all these other countries, especially if
stuff goes really really south and a war breaks out.
Keep ourselves arm length and distance away from what's happening
(04:23):
around the globe when it comes to war, at the
same time backing our allies. And when it comes to immigration,
we get ourselves ready to actually shut this border, to
allow people opportunities to come in to this country legally,
but not allow everybody here. It's that simple, That's it.
(04:45):
When they say Trump, what do you think about comedy? Like? Isitiation?
Is she black? Is she a woman? Did you hear
about her husband sleeping with the babysitter before they were mayor?
None of that matters? Economics, economics, economics, immigration, Focus on
(05:06):
those and you win.
Speaker 5 (05:07):
Well, no question. I think what you're seeing Leland is
first of all, whoever occupies the White House, whoever is
the administration in power, good or bad. They're going to
get the credit or blame for what goes on in
the economy and the markets.
Speaker 6 (05:21):
We see that over and over again, and.
Speaker 5 (05:23):
I think to a certain extent, you are seeing some
repricing in the markets due to maybe the last week
or so where we've seen the election odds change a bit, right.
So it's a fast paced move, no question, as you've
been reporting on, but there is an intersection between politics
and economics. Today's market crash, if you want to call it,
(05:47):
that isn't necessarily because of a poll or something like that.
But there is some shifting wind in the market, no question.
Speaker 2 (05:54):
That's right. People are feeling it. Yesterday's crash was nasty. Nasdaq,
the Dow, that's going on around the globe an e K.
I expect to bounce back. I'm not a guy that
freaks out about these things. We talked to about the
Zach Abraham all the time here, the chief investment officer
for Bulwark. I don't invest in the stock market. You'd
be foolish not to. Long term, it's amazing. But if
(06:19):
you're retiring tomorrow, maybe a little bit more worried. But
if you're thirty two, these are things that are going
to happen, and we gauge a lot off the stock market.
We think Wall Street and Main Street aren't the same.
One of the things I've talked about, and this is
an economists professor Dan Ricardo from University of San Diego
(06:43):
talking about the things that we've talked about for Evan today,
the two tiered economy, which is as an employer employee,
you feel pretty good. As a consumer, that's a different story, and.
Speaker 6 (06:56):
It's what I call a kitchen table recession.
Speaker 5 (06:59):
You're rightechnically, we're probably not in a recession, and we
won't know that, by the way, until we look backwards.
But I called a kitchen table recession for a reason, Leland,
and that's because many Americans, poll after poll tell us that, yes,
we have a job. Yes the job market is getting
a little bit weaker, but we still think we will
have a job. But the fact is, when we sit
(07:20):
around our kitchen table to do our budget, to figure
out where our money's going between you know, ten dollars
burritos and eight dollars mini weeks, we're not making it right.
Our incomes in many ways over the last number of years,
having kept pace with inflation. So technically the economists you know,
shout out to them. They we may not be in
a recession, but if you ask your next door neighbor,
(07:43):
she's probably going to tell.
Speaker 2 (07:44):
You she is consumer confidence. If you feel good, you
spend money. If you feel good, you'll do a little
bit more than maybe you wouldn't if you were nervous.
People are starting to get nervous, the old saying nervous
like a cat with a long tail in a room
full of rocking chairs. The jitters. People are nervous, and
(08:06):
they look at the stock market as an indicator when
main Street is really what it's all about. How do
you feel well? Consumer confidence is down, and that matters.
What Main Street and Wall Street do do, though, is
they share the economic side when it comes to investment
and where a lot of big corporations go and what
(08:26):
happens when things go a little south, where's the big
money saving. Well, when things start to slow down, they
lay off people. That makes the job market tighter, and
in doing so that can potentially slow down spending, which
brings down inflation, which then could see rates start to
go down, which is the hope. If you're Trump, you
(08:48):
focus on these don't make it personal. Personal is not
going to win, and stop attacking people who already support you,
which I find really ridiculous.
Speaker 6 (08:58):
Let's call it a mixed bag on that.
Speaker 5 (09:00):
And by the way, the rich have gotten richer throughout history,
and this is not a Republican or Democrat issue. They're
doing quite fine, by the way, then, you know, so great,
good for them. But the reality is that President Trump
had certain policies that were clearly more market friendly, and
in fact, one of the ones he's been articulating the
(09:21):
last few weeks, as you know, is his whole position
on cryptocurrencies very market friendly.
Speaker 6 (09:27):
That's a Donald Trump hallmark.
Speaker 5 (09:29):
We've seen that in President Trump's history throughout, whereas on
the other side of the Ledger, Democrats typically favor a
little bit more regulation, that typically favor a little bit
more tax right than the Republicans would favor. So there's
no question there's at least a difference, subtle as it
may be, between the economic policies of the former president
(09:51):
and this president and potentially future president.
Speaker 2 (09:56):
That's why you focus. You focus where you need to focus,
the economy. The economy, the economy, immigration, immigration, immigration, You
focus in those places when they ask her a when
they ask him a question about her, say, look, you
guys know what I want to do with the economy.
(10:16):
You know how I want to bring down inflation. You
know the things I want to do. When it comes
to immigration, what are her positions? Because they've changed, That's
what I heard, because she's not talking about it. She's
not talking about her immigration stance that has changed. She's
not talking about what she would do to get the
economy rocking and roll again. She's saying Bidenomics and seeing
(10:37):
all these kind of things. But you talk to people,
they feel like things aren't going so well. Let's focus
on the things that matter. Shouldn't be this hard. This
is what infuriates me about Trump. It does. You make
it personal, and that is not a winning thing. Your grievances.
I have to be honest with you. I don't care.
(11:00):
A lot of people make care. I don't. I'm not
one of those people. I'm not. You want to be
the leader again and focus on the things that matters.
If you want to go up and have a bitch
fest in front of fifteen thousand people about how you've
been wronged, that doesn't fix the things that matter. If
(11:23):
your goal is to win. The path is there. If
your goal is to feel like you're righting a wrong,
that's not gonna help and you're not gonna win. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four twenty three at Chad Benson Show.
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(12:47):
going on in the UK anarchy? It's our good friend
Johnny Rotten would say, talk a little bit about that
because it needs to be talked about, because multiculturalism fails.
It's the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (13:10):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 7 (13:12):
Have you spoken a President Biden since he dropped out?
Speaker 8 (13:14):
I havenah.
Speaker 2 (13:15):
Do you hope to?
Speaker 9 (13:16):
Yes?
Speaker 10 (13:17):
I hope too.
Speaker 7 (13:17):
We're all Is everything okay with your relationship?
Speaker 8 (13:20):
You'd have to ask him, but I hope. But he knows. Look,
I have loved Joe Biden, respected him for over forty years.
I was party chair in California then I became member
of Congress, and then one thing other House member, House
speaker working with him all along. I think he has
made one of the biggest contributions to our country in
the shortest period of time.
Speaker 2 (13:42):
Yeah, yeah, so there's that. Have you spoken him now? Now,
he's kind of pissed me because I stabbed him in
the back and forced him out. But I didn't do it,
but I pretty much did it. So there's that. But hey,
I love him and he should probably be on Mount Rushmore.
Speaker 8 (13:55):
Such a consequential president of the United States, a Mount
Rushmore kind of president of the United States.
Speaker 6 (14:02):
Want to know when comes next.
Speaker 10 (14:04):
That he belongs up there on Mount Rushmore. Lincoln and
Joe Biden, but you got Teddy Roosevelt up there, and
he's wonderful. I don't say take him down, but you
can add Biden.
Speaker 2 (14:17):
I feel like Nancy's been day drinking some more of
Nancy and her fun.
Speaker 8 (14:24):
Whether it's well, it's the first bill, the first bill
protect so built COVID, shots in the arm, money in
the pockets, children at school, people at work, the infrastructure bill,
building building in a way that is respectful of communities,
(14:45):
chips and science.
Speaker 2 (14:47):
What the hell, are you talking about again? Day drinking?
But then you gotta asked this question about anti semitism,
and she's very nonchalant, like me. Maybe.
Speaker 9 (14:57):
Congressman Jake Auchencross said today that there is a strong
undercurrent of anti Semitism to the fight against Shapiro.
Speaker 6 (15:04):
Do you think that's true?
Speaker 8 (15:05):
Well, I certainly hope not.
Speaker 2 (15:06):
No. I well, I certainly hope not. I mean, that
would be bad if there was anti semitism. You think
there is, let's listen to it again.
Speaker 9 (15:13):
Congressman Jake Auchincloss said today that there is a strong
undercurrent of anti Semitism to the fight against Shapiro.
Speaker 7 (15:20):
Do you think that's true?
Speaker 8 (15:22):
Well, I certainly hope not.
Speaker 9 (15:23):
No.
Speaker 8 (15:23):
I think it's probably more about policy. But the decision
will be made by our candidate for President of the
United States, and it's important for people to weigh in
as they think.
Speaker 2 (15:36):
I certainly hope not. It's probably not the answer you're
looking for. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four
to twenty three at Chad Benson Shows, your Twitter, tweet,
at as text the program. Love hearing from all of
you on The Chad Benson Show. The answer would be no, no,
there's not there's not anti semitism. There are a few
loud people or supporters of Palestine who also want to
(15:59):
see the death of an America and hate the Jews.
But sure they may vote Democrat. But then the other
side of it is, you know, yeah, there's some anti semitism.
Frank Luntz is a polster who is really, really, really
good at his job, and he has said, hey, I
(16:19):
am going to give you guys the path to defeating Harris.
It is this simple the path that quite frankly, the Republicans,
apparently in particular Donald Trump doesn't want to talk about
makes everything personal when you need to make it up policy.
Speaker 5 (16:33):
So what's the word choice for Trump against Harris?
Speaker 11 (16:36):
Can you name one thing she did as vice presidents
and leave it at that. Can you name one thing
she accomplished as vice president? Ten words?
Speaker 2 (16:45):
Ten words? Don't make it personal. Don't attack the way
that you are so wanting to do, which is make
everything personal. Just keep it to policy.
Speaker 11 (16:56):
And it's a legitimate criticism. She was number two in
this country. She was given them responsibility for immigration. How's
their immigration working out?
Speaker 12 (17:04):
Well?
Speaker 13 (17:05):
Her folks would say, she was put in charge of
investigating the root causes of immigrants.
Speaker 6 (17:09):
And when she do that, how many vice presidents?
Speaker 11 (17:12):
How successful has she been? What else did Joe Biden
task her to do? In our lifetime, we've seen Dick Cheney,
who's arguably as powerful as a president a vice president,
and Joe Biden, when he was vice president, had specific
responsibilities under the Obama administration.
Speaker 6 (17:28):
She did nothing.
Speaker 2 (17:30):
Make it about policy, not personal. It's that simple. You're
going to catch more and more flies and expand that
tent doing that.
Speaker 1 (17:37):
It's a Chad Benson show, such Chad Benson, Joe, independent thoughts,
(18:01):
independent life. This is Chad Benson.
Speaker 12 (18:06):
And okay, body, okay, let's call me sometime. Am I
look ever ng time stop at traffic line yet age
a dream as a shop spauside.
Speaker 2 (18:23):
Wana Bay and okay, great, Johnny, you're right in there.
Multiculturalism sucks and it doesn't work. Thank you very much.
Good night. Now it doesn't it doesn't work. It is
not going to work, and we are seeing it take
place around the globe. When you allow mass immigration, both
(18:47):
legal and illegal, into your country and the people that
come there want zero part of what you're offering to be,
whether it's an American or a brit Or, a French
person or a Scandinavian. It fails. It fails, it fails,
(19:08):
it fails. Multiculturalism is not diversity. People get those things confused. Well,
it's a diverse country now. When you allow people to
come in to your nation and to live their life
the way they did before, and to essentially sequester themselves
(19:31):
into their own world with their own rules and not assimilate,
you're eventually going to run into serious issues. And that's
what's going on in the UK. Started a couple of
weeks ago when three young girls were stabbed and killed,
and since then it has been a tender box. A
(19:53):
tender box. You had Ah by the way, he's an
English kid. Well, he's eighteen now born in England. His
families from Rwanda, and people are pissed and angry about
what's going on over there. I think he was mentally ill.
There's been no signs of whether or not it was terrorism.
(20:14):
But here's the thing. At some point, you've allowed so
much to happen in your country that people are looking
for something. People are frustrated. And I can speak on
this because I lived in Britain for ten years. It
(20:35):
was my home. I love it. It is not the
same London is not the same Luton is. You might
as well be in parts of Afghanistan or Pakistan. You
get up to Birmingham, it used to be the joke
when I was there. Leads all of these places and
(20:59):
you have people that do assimilate absolutely, but you have
a lot that don't and they don't want to. They
want all the goodies you have. They want to be
able to come there and live their life the way
they want to live it, just free from the nightmare
of their crappy country. And now what you're getting is
riots and violence because they're pissed. And it's not just
(21:20):
the crazy right wingers, by the way, it's a lot
of people in Britain.
Speaker 14 (21:23):
Nearly one hundred and fifty people arrested this weekend as
violent anti immigration rallies hit multiple cities for the third
day in a row. Far right groups exploiting the horrific
stabbing attack at a dance class last Monday that killed
three children, Britain's Prime Minister Kirs Starmuth promising those involved
in the violence will face the full force of the law.
Speaker 2 (21:45):
He's pissed and they should face the full force because
what they did was horrific. That being said, when you
do what you have done over the last omteen years
since the early two thousand, which is allowed for mass
immigration into a country, you're gonna get what you get.
People have had enough. People are angry, they're pissed, they've
(22:07):
had enough. Britain isn't Britain anymore. I hear that more
and more. You've got so many people. Women are pissed,
Men are pist, Journalists are pissed. People on the left
or piss people on the right are pissed because they
feel like they're looking out there and saying this isn't
our country. Well, that's racism. Call it whatever you want.
Multiculturalism doesn't work. We've talked about this a thousand times.
(22:30):
What binds us as a nation, no matter what nation
you're in, is the shared beliefs you being black, gay, straight, Muslim, Hindu,
hari Krishna, atheist. Those things don't matter. What matters is
what are the things in that country that bind you,
that make you who you are?
Speaker 15 (22:48):
Right?
Speaker 2 (22:48):
Our belief of freedom, right are constitutional rights? Those things
us being in America, that's those beliefs that sense. Same
thing in Britain and they've lost that, and they're pissed
and they're angry, and they're looking around going what have
you done? Well, you're gonna get what you get. You've
allowed this to go crazy, You've allowed this to run wild.
You've allowed this lunacy to take place where you have
(23:11):
displaced hundreds of young working men who feel they're way
back in the back of the line that the government
now stop me if this sounds familiar, has said, hey,
you guys are second class citizens here. You're not getting
any of this. They're gonna get special attention, they're gonna
get to the front of the lines and everything. They're
gonna get all of those things. You, on the other hand,
(23:32):
you're just sol oh, that's not good.
Speaker 6 (23:35):
Tens of thousands, probably hundreds of thousands of people from
the UK who have no love at all for the
UK but yet live here. We have a couple of choices,
clearly at this point. One of them is when I
say this metaphorically for the time being, but it's not
that metaphorical. One is to stand up, and the other
is to beg on your knees. I don't think that
(23:56):
the British public should be on their knees begging.
Speaker 15 (24:02):
No.
Speaker 2 (24:02):
Douglas Murray very open about how he feels. And it
goes back to this again. It's a thing I've said
with immigration. Who wants to be here, Who wants to
be here because you love this country, because you love
the opportunities, because you love what this country is about
from its core. Who wants to be here that much,
(24:25):
then that's amazing, That's great. You're American, you're a Britain,
whatever it is. If you're here for a booty call
and you only want to work and you want to leave,
you're you're not interested in changing our culture or doing
anything like that, totally understandable. If you're here because you
want to live the life the way that you have,
you're not interested in anything the West has to offer,
whether it's America, Britain or anywhere else, and you're going
(24:46):
to live your life that way and sol on the
rest of us. That isn't going to happen, nor should it.
Speaker 6 (24:53):
I think we have to start saying very clearly, if
you don't like it here, go and if you don't
like it here and you tend to make it worse,
we will make you go.
Speaker 2 (25:03):
That's right. I agree, make you go, Make you go
if you don't want to be here, Make you go
if you don't want a part of this go. But Chad,
it's not diverse. I don't give a rat ass about
any of that crap. It's a whole bunch of crap,
by the way, it's all a bunch of hooy and nonsense.
(25:25):
What matters if you're coming here? Are you here because
you want to be American? Are you here because you
want to be a britt Are you here because you
want to be a friend. Multiculturalism doesn't work. It doesn't
because your culture is your culture. My culture is my culture.
(25:45):
Coming here to trying to change our culture and who
we are and what we're about is ridiculous.
Speaker 16 (25:50):
They are living in silos which become ghettos, and they
are completely out of touch with any values that I
associate with being British. It's multiculturalism is not working.
Speaker 17 (26:01):
Why would any effort minority one?
Speaker 6 (26:05):
So they should all come over here and treat it
as a second.
Speaker 18 (26:09):
The fact they can't speak English when they've lived here
for decades isn't something that you should be afraid to
call out.
Speaker 16 (26:14):
They are no longer assimilating.
Speaker 2 (26:18):
They're not they're not assimilating. You have to. You know,
when I moved to England, and I was so blessed
to do so. As a young kid got to go
over and play soccer and they did radio and all
kind of stuff. You know what I did because it's English,
as I possibly could now, it was a little bit English.
We spoke the language. But I threw myself into it,
(26:39):
even eating some of the bad food. I threw myself
into what it was. I was. I've told you guys this.
Outside of the Olympics and you know, the World Cup
or whatever we played each other, I was. I was
England through and through. I was three lions, through and through.
I assimilated because I want to. You have to do that.
(27:05):
They're not. You're seeing what's happening in Scandinavia. They don't
want to. They want to live their lives the way
they want to live their life, the way under the
rules of which they think is right, and in doing so,
screw everybody else. And by the way, our laws should
count more than your laws. And that frustrates a lot.
(27:29):
This is a reporter, Alex Phillips, a big journalist over there,
who's had enough.
Speaker 19 (27:33):
Important issue for me because I've been living in London
for ten years. I've also lived in multiple other countries
around the world. Never before have I felt as unsafe
as I do now. When I walk down the street.
I'm increasingly being leader, I'm increasingly having I'm increasingly being followed,
like I'm going around the souks of Morocco. And it's
not visibly to me anyway, people who were born and
(27:55):
bred here, it isn't.
Speaker 15 (27:58):
You know.
Speaker 19 (27:58):
It's very difficult because we're not a light talk about
it because oh, my gosh, you know that breaks to boo.
Oh you know you're a racist if you say this.
I'm sorry. A lot of women going about their daily
business feel that their safety is being directly threatened by
people who are coming from different cultures, and this needs
to be discussed because I've had enough. All my other
female friends have had enough. When I put this stuff online.
(28:20):
The number of comments online from other women saying they've
had enough and saying thank you for talking about this.
Was it not enough when we noticed what was going
on with grooming gangs?
Speaker 2 (28:30):
Was it not enough?
Speaker 19 (28:30):
When we see what's happened to the victim of Abdollah Zaidi?
When are we going to have the conversation that women's
safety is being mortgaged at the altar of mass immigration
and this faux political correctness.
Speaker 2 (28:44):
Yeah, and people are having enough. They're done, and they're
speaking up. And it's not about your faith, it's not
about the color of your skin. Some people make it that.
And are there some crazies out there that do stuff? Absolutely,
trust me. I've had to run in with the National Front.
(29:04):
We'll talk about that a little later. That is one
of the ultras on the right side of the aisle
who are nut jobs. But this for the average brit
Is watching their culture disappear. This for the average brit
seeing people come there get put to the front of
(29:25):
the line, whether it's NHS that's National Health Services or
for housing or for things like that, and feeling like
they are being tossed aside, and Britain is being tossed aside,
and they've had enough. Three two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson shows your
Twitter tweet at his text to program. Tim Walls, Minnesota governor,
vice presidential candidate now with Kamala Harris so yay, I
(29:51):
don't know, does it do anything I'll talk a little
bit about it next hour. Board Capital. Right now, you
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com for more information. It's a chat Benson.
Speaker 20 (31:04):
Joe running with scissors sounds great compared to this.
Speaker 2 (31:18):
Same saw some Halloween stuff in the store the other day,
so I know it's getting that time. If you hear
full speaking of Halloween. The movie The Conjuring, which I loved,
Well the House it's making news again, and boy, it's
why you love America.
Speaker 21 (31:35):
Well House, made famous by the twenty thirteen supernatural horror film,
is making headlines. The owner of the Conjuring House claims
the man who works there is stealing, based on messages
she says she's heard from nineteenth century spirits.
Speaker 22 (31:50):
Brian Danceo says he worked at the Conjuring House for
the past three years. That's until the owner, Jacqueline Nunez,
fired him. She tells me she's a medium in that is,
he from the house told her dance Ro was stealing.
Speaker 2 (32:04):
She's a medium. I'm a large, used to be an
extra large. You've got fitter. Oh a medium, my bat
in May.
Speaker 22 (32:12):
Dancero, when full time is the house, is vice president
of operations. But within two months, owner Jacqueline Nunez let
him go after saying she'd heard from the house is
nineteenth century owner. These are text messages she sent to
dance Ro.
Speaker 23 (32:26):
John Donald told me you spend stealing money out of
the cash box for the past two months. And I
literally stopped and I actually corrected him like John Donald,
one of the original owners who died in eighteen thirty nine.
And she said, yes, and I want you to pay
it back.
Speaker 2 (32:42):
You know. They were arguing over this. Hey, I talked
to a ghost that says, you've been stealing crap in
this house. Don't do it, pay it back now you fired.
Speaker 22 (32:49):
It's known as a conjuring house, made famous by a
twenty thirteen movie, and for years it's captivated the imaginations
of those who seek paranormal experiences.
Speaker 23 (33:00):
Voices of course, footsteps of course.
Speaker 22 (33:02):
Brian Dancero began working in the house in twenty twenty one.
Speaker 23 (33:06):
One of the stories I have which makes me smile
to this day is carrying heavy boxes in and get
ready to balance it to open the door and literally
opening for me as I approached it, allow me to
walk in with the boxes.
Speaker 2 (33:17):
And I did say, think it. It's not all bad.
Having a haunted house is not all bad. It's not
all scary. Sometimes you share a house and somebody's very nice.
From the nineteenth century, They're like, look, I'm here to
scare you. But at the same time, I'm a gentleman.
Speaker 23 (33:32):
Horrible, everything about this is horrible.
Speaker 22 (33:34):
Danc Ro filed this claim with the Department of Labor
and Training, stating the Nunez owes him nine thousand dollars
for unpaid wages. He denies any wrongdoing.
Speaker 6 (33:44):
Now did you steal?
Speaker 23 (33:45):
I can tell you no. I was a paramedic for
over thirty years. The stress of all this has been
keeping up at night. I've been having a problem with
breathing at night because of anxiety over it.
Speaker 22 (33:54):
When asked to respond, Nuna's told Target twelve in part I,
and every person is entitled to it experiences that bring
understanding and meaning to our lives, including being informed or
warned about wicked actors and action. State officials are investigating
the claim I love that did you steal?
Speaker 24 (34:12):
No?
Speaker 2 (34:12):
I was a paramedic for thirty years. What's that have
to do with anything? The answer is just no or yes,
like no, I would never do that. That's ridiculous. And
the fact that she has accused me based not on
evidence that she has seen, based on the fact that
the ghost told her this happened, is ridiculous. It is
just letting you guys know that. Speaking of ridiculous, you
(34:33):
guys can remember the alphabet song abc D EIFT. It's changed.
What it's changed?
Speaker 25 (34:38):
The alphabet song of our youth has been scrapped and
parents are having to learn a new version of a
song to keep up with their children. So the alphabet
song we Know and Love that's set to the same
tune as Twinkle Twinkle Little Star ABCD fg hi jk
l mn OP. Yeah, that version is long gone.
Speaker 2 (34:58):
So what do you mean it's long gone? They've changed
it up and everybody's favorite parts elementop has been changed.
Speaker 6 (35:06):
A b CD e f g.
Speaker 16 (35:12):
H I j k l m n O b q rst.
Speaker 2 (35:22):
That the way the song goes. Communism No come on,
we elementop. We love saying it. It's part of it.
Stops screwing with our childhood. Three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four to twenty three Atch at Benson Show. That
is your Twitter, your Instagram, all of the other things.
A lot of you tweeting at me, texting the program.
(35:43):
I love hearing from every one of you. We've got
some stuff to talk about coming up in the second hour,
including RFK Junior and the bear debucle The mystery has
been solved about the bear in Central Park. We're going
to talk about that. Just the bizarre, weird. I don't
even know how to describe it. Just what the hell
(36:05):
is going on in our country. Got some of your
texts coming up as well. Moron Kamala's pick for VP.
You're missing this show, make sure you grabbed the podcast.
It is the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (36:24):
This is the Chad Benson Show, Independent Thoughts, independent life,
(36:54):
This is Chad Benson.
Speaker 2 (36:55):
It's official. It is official. Breaking new news, break break, break, break, ber,
breaking news again. I still have many sound effects. You
got breaking news. Tim Walls, Minnesota Governor, It's going to
be VP. Harris's pick to be VP. That makes sense.
(37:18):
So good news for all of those out there who
are on the left and don't like the Jews and
couldn't stand Josh Shapiro. Probably better news for Chicago that
it wasn't going to catch fire with all the protesters
with Josh Shapiro being there. But yes, breaking news, breaking
news tim Wall's pick that.
Speaker 26 (37:36):
Her pick is Minnesota Governor Tim Walls one of the
three finalists and one of the two finalists actually as
of last night that we have been talking about, Sarah.
Just to put this in the bigger context for folks
who are tuning in, this is a pick by the
Harris campaign and by the Vice President to go after
these Midwestern, rural, moderate white voters per tea regularly in
(38:00):
the middle of the country. These are voters, many of
whom had swung away from Democrats and to Donald Trump
back in twenty sixteen, also in twenty twenty, and it
is a choice that is squarely aimed at the Blue
Wall states. At the Harris campaign and formally the Biden
campaign had talked about so much eighties at a tempt
(38:21):
to try to engage and win those Obama to Trump voters.
Speaker 2 (38:26):
Can he engaged those Obama to bump. No, I don't
think he can engage the way that you'd think in
Middle America. He is a was the military, former teacher.
One of the reasons they didn't like Jos Shapiro, by
the way, is and I was talking to our buddy
Jim Kennedy Kennedyan's pub Calitsy Research last night. One of
the reasons they're not a fan of him is he
(38:46):
wasn't pro union, was for school choice. Josh Shapiro was
it you and had written in the past stuff about
Palace diede Oh my god. There was a lot of
issues with him, but when it came to being uber progressive,
he wasn't uber progressive, kind of middle of the road.
(39:08):
Trust me. If i'm Donald Trump today, I'm like, yes, yes, yes,
I didn't want Jos Shapiro, who, by the way, probably
should have been at the top of the ticket. I
didn't want him. You got the best thing that you
could get, which is a pick that I don't think
does much for the ticket. Isn't going to dazzle the Midwest,
(39:31):
and it's probably not going to bring you Oh wait,
you already have Minnesota. So what does that do for Pennsylvania?
That's an interesting thing. How will he govern? It's a
very important part of how's he going to be a
part of this team.
Speaker 26 (39:42):
By choosing somebody that really can speak directly to rural America. Now,
in terms of what kind of a governing partner, Tim
Walls might be for Vice President Harris, something that we
have been talking about a lot has been top of
mine for her as she has been going through this
deliberation process. He is somebody that she can potentially say,
go up to Capitol Hill and talk to these lawmakers
(40:05):
that you are going to be so familiar with, because remember,
he is somebody that before he was governor served for
more than a decade in the House of Representatives. He
is somebody that she could lean on to be savvy
in Washington, DC. And in that way, it actually is
quite close to the model of the Barack Obama choice
for Joe Biden back in two thousand and eight.
Speaker 2 (40:28):
Now, Okay, do I think it does anything. No, I don't.
I don't think it's going to do any of the
stuff that they're hoping it does. This just stops the
uber progressive left from losing their blanking mind and potentially
turning Chicago into a war zone part. Do how do
(40:51):
you think she came to this picture check? Do you
think there was a vibs pic?
Speaker 26 (40:54):
I was just told by a source familiar that in
the Vedding process, one thing that the Vice present it
was particularly impressed with with the Minnesota governor was his
sort of happy, go lucky warrior presence and sort of
a joyful presence. You know, there is a reason that
Tim Walls went from being the darkest dark course to
(41:16):
being one of the finalists and of course now the
pick as her running mate. It is because a lot
of people have noticed this sort of down to earth
likable quality to him. A number of people that I
have spoken to throughout this process, they have said that
he is just a blast, that he is fun to
be with. We in fact reported a couple of days
(41:36):
ago that President Joe Biden has enjoyed spending time with him,
so much so that advisors have joked, could we find
a way to get the Minnesota governor to spend more
time with the president because every time he does that,
he seems to be in a great mood.
Speaker 2 (41:51):
Oh my god. Well that's the number one reason right
there to pick somebody. Hey, pick this guy, because he
puts everybody in a good mood. That's great on a sportam,
but not when you're looking to run the country and
potentially you're second in charge of the world. The vibes
are good with him. By the way, sanctuary city absolutely,
one hundred and ten percent open borders.
Speaker 7 (42:11):
You bet you should Minnesota be a sanctuary state.
Speaker 27 (42:14):
Uh.
Speaker 13 (42:14):
If the definition of that is that the federal government
enforces immigration law and local law enforcement enforces local law,
then yes.
Speaker 1 (42:23):
Should cities be allowed to be sanctuary cities?
Speaker 2 (42:25):
Yes? Local control. Yeah. Just like by the way, abortion,
Well wait what Well, I'm just saying, just like abortion,
if you're allowed to skirt federal then and you want
states control, then that should be states controlled. There he's
talking about being a happy socialist. You can call him
a socialist, but he says it's just being neighborly. But
(42:48):
he's what they wanted. And like I said earlier, Man,
if I'm Donald Trump, I'm over the moon. This is
exactly who I wanted. I didn't want Kelly. I didn't
want Kelly because he could potentially help with Arizona, and
I didn't want that. I sure in the hell didn't
want Josh Shapiro because take away the lunacy in the streets,
(43:12):
and this is what I wanted. Tim Walls is everything
I wanted. Super lefty way out there. They think he's
gonna help in the Midwest. He's not. He's not gonna
help the way they think. And he's got issues, by
the way, like they all do, just like Joel. Did
(43:34):
he say something about cats our buddy Jim Garritty. I
might try to get him on a little bit later
today or tomorrow to talk about him. But one of
the things he says is he has some issues when
it comes to management. He's been caught on numerous occasions, mismanagement, fraud,
waste abuse, feeding our future fraud scandal, largest COVID EID
(44:01):
fraud scheme in the country. Yeah, he was a part
of that. Masking kids, always keeping kids out of school.
One hundred percent one hundred percent Hero pay wasted on
(44:21):
dead people. Well signed into a law planned to pay
Minnesota frontline workers hero pay for their hard work during
the pandemic. The state's initial estimate was roughly six hundred
and sixty seven thousand people who were eligible for hero pay,
meaning they would get seven hundred and fifty dollars each,
But a few months later the state announced more than
a million Mithsonian Minnesotians had qualified, reduced the payments to
(44:43):
four hundred and eighty seven and guess what the estimate
was off by three hundred and thirty thousand people. Not
only did they say the waste was significant, some of
the people that received didn't even have a pulse. Oh,
but that's no big deal. Didn't follow procedures for avoiding
conflicts of interest on several occasions, handing out grants for
(45:09):
arts and behavioral health two people he knew what these
are just a few things they had talked about. It
was it was a great pick for Trump. I don't
think this does a lot for come. Honestly, a Harris
(45:30):
Shapiro ticket if you can get away from the crazies
in the party that want you to be anti Israel,
who are anti Semitic, who are down with Israel and
up with Hamas, if you can step away from them
for a moment, which is a small number, but it's loud.
(45:53):
Josh Shapiro and Harris that had been a great ticket.
Tough to beat this nah celebrate, celebrate. I don't think
this gives you the momentum you hope for three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show
is your Twitter tweet at his texted program. And on
the other side, I look over and I see Donald
(46:13):
Trump having the opportunity to do some good things and
come out, and he just drops the ball time and
time again. And you guys get pissed at me when
I say that, it's the reality of it continues at
times to drop the ball. This weekend when he was
in Georgia, all he did was hammer, hammer, hammer, hammer, hammer,
(46:36):
hammer the governor there. That doesn't help you. Mark, Victor
Hanson and Lori Ingram were talking about this that, you
know what, destroying other Republicans inside of their states doesn't
help you.
Speaker 28 (46:51):
Shooting inside the tent right now of the Republican Party.
That's a loser of strategy. That's not going to work.
They tried that in twenty twenty and we lost two
Senate seats than in twenty twenty two. It's more it
doesn't work. You got to focus on what they are
doing to destroy this country.
Speaker 29 (47:07):
Brian Kemp, whatever the disagreement, he's already endorsed Trump, So
don't waste time on Brian Kemp. I wouldn't even get
into the past history, of her personal history or waste
of time of Kamala Harris. I would just say that
she is flipping in a very opportunistic fashion just to
get elected. And then once she's elected, it's the Obama
(47:27):
fourth term, and you know what that's like. And if
he sticks to that in those swing states and he
and Jdvans, there's no more articulate person that can make
that case, they will win. But if he gets off
in these tangents, I'm worried.
Speaker 2 (47:41):
And you should be, because he can't help himself. He
makes everything personal, and he gets frustrated, and because it
becomes personal, and because it feels like the momentum is
not with him, he goes after and he snaps, and
he goes after everybody. And because of that, you're putting
yourself in a losing position. That's a you problem. You
better sort this out. I've had several of you say,
(48:03):
you know what, I get mad when you talk about Trump,
but you're right on this one. I am focus on
the things that matter, the economy, immigration, global insanity. Leave
the personal attacks out and stop attacking your own It
doesn't help you. And this isn't a disagreement on policy.
This is you let me down and you lost the
(48:25):
election for me. So I'm just gonna come out and
say your wife's fat something like that's so stupid. Three two, three,
five three eight, twenty four twenty three at ched Benson
shows your Twitter. By the way, I just made the
wife fat up. I'm joking about that, Governor Camp. I'm
sure your wife is loved. I'm just saying that's a
personal thing that Trump would do. You guys understand that
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best earbuds around the everyday earbuds from Racon. Bye Racon
dot com slash Chad. Oh, let's talk about bears and
RFK Junior, just because we need a laugh, Chad Benson.
Speaker 1 (49:38):
Joe, you're listening to the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 30 (49:52):
Well, in front of me hit a bear and killed it,
a young bear. So I pulled over and I and
put him in the back of my van because I
was gonna skin the bear and put the meat my refrigerator.
And you can do that in the or to say
you can get a bear attack for a rug killed bear,
I said, let us go put the bear in a
central park and we'll make it look like he didn't play.
(50:14):
Everybody thought that's a great idea, so we wouldn't did that,
and we thought it would be a music for whoever
found it or something. The next day it was on
every television station. It was a front pet of every paper.
Speaker 2 (50:27):
Oh my god, what the f happened?
Speaker 8 (50:30):
There?
Speaker 2 (50:31):
So if you guys haven't heard the story, and again
we were off yesterday. Didn't kill a bear, but somebody
else did. And he saw it. So he thought to himself,
I'll take it. I'm gonna skin it because it looks good.
I'll eat the meat. But I'm on my way to somewhere.
And the fact that you have a van is also creepy.
And a bike in the back of your van. What
is what? What? So you see somebody hit the bear,
(50:51):
you thought, oh, great, I'll have a nice bear rug
because the bear, he said, was in pretty good shape.
We'll eat the meat. I'll put it in the back
of my van with the bike that I have in
the back of my van. Creepy and uh, but first
I have to go falconing as you do. Even morning
Joe couldn't resist.
Speaker 31 (51:09):
The revelation of RFK Junior's video last night united us
collectively with the what the He was hiking he was
upstate New York found a dead bear. He decided that, oh,
I'd like to have this dead bear. I could skin it,
eat it bear meat. He throws it in his truck,
then heads to the city, New York City for expensive
dinner at a steakhouse Peter Luger's Fame dinner. Realizes then
(51:29):
that the bear meat is still in his car.
Speaker 2 (51:31):
He was gonna eat the bear cub.
Speaker 31 (51:33):
But we've all had that dilemma when you realize like, oh,
I've got the bear meat in the car.
Speaker 2 (51:36):
But oh man, the steak here is so good. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
I just thought he was going to eat. First of all,
the bear cub was dead. Okay, he wasn't keeping it
as a pet, raising it. He's like, one day I'm
going to kill you and skin you and where you
He wasn't doing any of that. That being said, I forgot.
I left out the part that he was going to
go to Falconing all day after finding the dead bear cub,
(51:56):
then to Peter Luger's, which is this super awesome rest
of New York, and then he had to get on
a plane.
Speaker 31 (52:03):
But I've still got this bear meat in the car,
So he says, he consults with his dinner.
Speaker 2 (52:08):
Companions, what should we do? Drive to Central.
Speaker 31 (52:11):
Park, jump the bear dead bear cub there, and stage
it as if the bear had been killed by a bicyclist.
Speaker 2 (52:20):
Three two, three, five, three, twenty four twenty three at
Chad Benson shows your Twitter tweet as texta program right
here in the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 31 (52:31):
And then that story ten odd years ago was a
national story. A bunch of outlets covered it. They said,
there's a dead bear at Central Park.
Speaker 6 (52:39):
That's newsworthy.
Speaker 31 (52:40):
And yes, as you mentioned, it was a Kennedy family
relative unbeknownst to her, who had the story for The
New York Times the next day.
Speaker 2 (52:48):
Yeah, just waiting, waiting for the day that something was
going to happen where they could release it.
Speaker 4 (52:52):
Get him.
Speaker 2 (52:54):
The hell is wrong with you, dude? Just out of curiosity?
What in God's name were you thinking? A g I
got this dead bear cub, but I gotta make a fight,
and I'm not gonna go home and shower. But it's
in the back of my van. Why do I have
a van? Don't ask? I also have a kid's bike.
Also weird. I don't like vaccines. Just want you guys
to know that, just in case you didn't know that.
(53:15):
So bizarre. Yesterday it was funny.
Speaker 32 (53:17):
I was talking to producer Anthony So as I was
talking to him, he's we were talking about this, or
we were texting back and forth about you know, just
the chaos and craziness of modern politics.
Speaker 2 (53:30):
And he's like, who gets into politics? I mean, this
is who gets into politics. Wacky people, people who have
an obsession with power, people who have this want to
be around power, and who crave it. And that's who
gets into it. Because anybody who's worth their weight in salt,
who is normal, It's like, I want no part of that.
(53:53):
Who would have thought that? Now, which one of his
friends went. That's when you know you have a good friend.
When somebody says I'll help you, I'll help you take
care of that body. That's when you like that guy's
my friend forever. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four,
twenty three at Chad Benson Show is your Twitter? Can't
believe guy hit a bear for the world to see,
caused a news story and thought it was hilarious. He
(54:15):
wants to be president. Give missed the show, grabbed the
podcast Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson.
Speaker 1 (54:21):
Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent Life. This is Chad Benson.
Speaker 2 (54:46):
It was a shock heard round politics.
Speaker 8 (54:53):
Man.
Speaker 2 (54:54):
I said it earlier. I tweeted it out. If I
am the Trump campaign, I'm over the mur.
Speaker 33 (55:00):
This is a stunning choice. I imagine there's a lot
of cheering at mar A Lago at the moment. Look
Tim Walls, he's no one to scoff at. He unseated
a six term Republican in Congress. He won a conservative district.
He began as a moderate, and then he had a
radical transformation as soon as he got a trifecta in Minnesota.
I think it is fair to call him a progressive
(55:22):
in cheap's clothing. When you look at his record over
the last few years, what you see are transgender surgeries
for minors, carbon electrical grid by twenty forty, a driver's
licenses for illegal immigrants in function. His abortion policy allows
abortion and tell birth. These are policies that are far
to the left of America.
Speaker 2 (55:42):
Far to the left of it. Yes they are. Most America,
by the way, doesn't think you should be able to
have an abortion in the ninth month unless it's medically necessary.
The baby's going to die, You're going to die. But
it doesn't happen that much on the right. I'm gonna
tell you guys that that doesn't happen that much, doesn't
And out there on the left, what if they're raped?
They make it seem like that's every pregnancy, and it's
(56:03):
not but the transgender stuff. I've said it over and
over again. Sorry, you're a kid, you're a child. You're
not making these decisions and the stuff that gets pushed
on these kids. And he's all about this. Whoa, he's
a big times and hey, here's a license for everybody.
His failure, by the way, when to get control of
(56:24):
the riots. I mean, we can go on and on.
There's a lot of stuff out there, but what he
does is he checks the box. When it comes to
the angry left who's pissed off Palestine. He cares about,
you know, inclusion and equity. That's the most important thing
to him. So they got what they wanted, and so
did Trump, and then they got what they wanted. You're
(56:46):
not running against Joshapiro, who, by the way, kicked you
and Biden's ass in the last election.
Speaker 33 (56:52):
And as John McCormick at The Wall Street Journal pointed out,
Kamala Harris has to do the exact opposite of what
Tim Walls did. Tim Walls became more progressive, Kamala Harris
is trying to become more moderate. But Republicans are going
to say, you've shred, you've shard all your progressive policies,
but yet you chose a progressive instead of the guy
who outperformed Donald Trump and Joe Biden in Pennsylvania. And
(57:14):
that man's name is Josh Shapiro.
Speaker 2 (57:16):
Who I like, and I've said it over and over.
Speaker 13 (57:19):
He how do you like?
Speaker 2 (57:20):
Because I like. I think he's a I think he's
a smart guy. I think he's a really good politician.
He's very popular in Pennsylvania, which you're gonna need maybe
the most important state. I don't know if you help
them yourselves there. On top of that, he is not
the hardcore lefty that this guy has become. I know this.
(57:42):
Politicians will say anything to get elected. That's the whole
thing about politicians. What do I have to say to
get elected? Because it's about the power. It's that's the
most important thing. So they'll say anything they have to
to get elected. This guy's gone hardcore left and it
(58:07):
is he went from a moderate to a progressive. Now
it's the opposite of what, like she said, Kamala is
trying to We're still trying to figure that out. I mean,
I'm still trying to figure out where do you actually
stand on these things? Because the media is trying to
run rough shot for anybody who questions some of these things.
But now the media is even go hold on a second, though,
(58:28):
Maybe there's some stuff that's right here, because your surrogates
are coming out and you're saying, hey, you said this,
and now your people are saying that you're not for that.
You're not for banning fracking, but you were. You compared
Ice almost well to the KKK, and you wanted to
basically get rid of it and start all over again.
(58:50):
I mean, we can go on and on. Where do
you actually stand on some of these things? It's a
very fair question.
Speaker 7 (58:57):
In the twenty twenty primary, the vice president and it
praised the defund the police movement, and now she says
she doesn't support defunding the police. She called for decriminalizing
crossing the border illegally. Now she supports President Biden's policies
for clamping down at the border. She supported Medicare for
all at one point eliminating private insurance. Her campaign says
(59:19):
she doesn't support that. Now she's reversed herself on a
fracking van.
Speaker 2 (59:25):
Where does she stand? I would like to hear it
from her. I think most people would like to hear
from good luck with that. At what point did they say,
hold on a second. She's going to have to answer
some of these questions. She's going to have to come
forward and say, well, this is where I stand on this,
this is why, and I've said this and some people
(59:46):
got mad at me the other day. Maybe she has
changed her mind about things. Maybe she has, But I
want to hear it from you. I want to hear
it from you, not from your surrogate. You would wich
means you're gonna have to speak to the people, which
means you're gonna have to come out and do interviews,
(01:00:08):
which means you're gonna have to come out and talk
to people. I want to hear it from you, And
will you? I don't know? Why would you?
Speaker 15 (01:00:22):
You know?
Speaker 2 (01:00:22):
I was talking to somebody last night who's very much
a Trump supporter, lives and brees too much politics.
Speaker 34 (01:00:29):
And.
Speaker 2 (01:00:33):
He's like, well, she's not even coming out and talking
to people, Like why would you? You don't have to
write now, you don't have to do any of that.
You don't have to talk to anybody until it's absolutely necessary.
If she can go the entire time without having to
answer a real question about why in theory she's having
(01:00:54):
people tell everybody that she's flipped from being this to that.
Now I'm foreclosing the borders and being stronger. Now I'm
for this here when it comes to fracking and oil
and gas. Now I'm four. If she doesn't ever have
to answer a question, why would you? It's like you
(01:01:16):
never let your client get on the stand unless it's
absolutely necessary, and at this point it's not absolutely necessary.
Maybe she has evolved, It's always a possibility some of
that stuff she said years ago. Okay, but why have
you evolved? Well, I don't know that. People are just
saying that, which makes me think you really have it.
(01:01:38):
But you're gonna say anything you want to say or
need to say to get elected, because that's politics. One
oh one. What do I have to say in front
of this audience to get elected? Because that matters, that's
the only thing that matter this audience. What do I
have to say to you? It's gonna get you excited
and bring in I'd like to hear. I think we
(01:02:03):
have a right to hear. Why you've changed positions? Nothing
wrong with that. You want America to vote for you?
Why should they vote for you? You go up and
you're great on the teleprompter. You can deliver a great speech,
but you have people saying, well, now, she never said
(01:02:24):
defund the police, reimagine, which is why, by the way,
I've always said that I think they stole that from me.
I would say the whole defund the police was the
worst marketing strategy ever. But when it came to ICE,
you did call them the KKK, you did say you
wanted to decriminalize coming here, make it a civil penalty.
(01:02:46):
I mean, we can go on and on about a
lot of these things that you said. So why are
you no longer for them? That's all we're asking. It's
a simple question. You can show everybody why you've evolved
and you've come around to a more hoderate position. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson
shows your Twitter tweet at as text to program love
(01:03:07):
hearing from all of you. It was a vibe pick.
That's what it was coming up with Tim Walls.
Speaker 33 (01:03:12):
So the word coming out of the Kamala Harris camp
to reporters was chemistry. She wanted someone with whom she
had chemistry. I would love to know what Obama said
to her on the phone, because this time last cycle,
four years ago, Joe Biden was having apprehensions about choosing
Kamala Harris. He called Obama. He expressed these reservations to Obama,
Percy and n and Obama said back to him, none
of that is as important as winning. So I wonder
(01:03:36):
what Obama said, because if this is a chemistry choice,
that's fantastic if you have chemistry, But if you don't
make it to Pennsylvania Avenue in two months, the chemistry
doesn't matter. So I've got to believe this was an
innate decision of how she was feeling. But feeling should
go out the window when you're looking at the path
to two seventy.
Speaker 2 (01:03:52):
One hundred percent Kayley mcaneney there and vibe whatever it is.
But behind the scenes, Obamas pulled some strings big time,
and they were really for this guy, comparatively to Shapiro,
who of course pisses all the progressives off. And if
(01:04:12):
you hear that sharing it to mar A Lago that
they didn't choose Josh Shapiro three two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three, atch head Benson shows your
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Let's talk Olympics straight ahead chat Benson Joe.
Speaker 35 (01:05:31):
I like, yeah, so what it's the chat Benson shows
at that time of the show where we talk about
the other Olympics.
Speaker 2 (01:05:53):
Yeah. I've been watching so much Olympics. It takes my
mind off the chaos going on in the world. And
it's been so much fun. It's been so entertaining. There's
been some wacky stuff, obviously, the whole thing about the fighter,
the big controversy there. It's a transfighter, it's not a
(01:06:13):
trans fighter. Kind of think of it as intersex. Kind
of has both parts if you will, on the inside,
if you will. But there is worry about the testosterone
levels things of that nature. But the controversy's like, well,
this person's trans not she's not trans. She's not. They
(01:06:36):
wouldn't allow that in Algeria, by the way, for those
who are not keeping score, But there is a fair
question to ask about the testosterone. That is a fair
question to ask in this situation. But watching people freak
out about that it's just I've been focusing on the
other stuff, like the Games, and we've got some gold
(01:06:57):
medals awarded over the weekend that we should talk about.
Talking about Noel Lyles obviously winning the one hundred meter
which was spectacular, but today earlier Caroline Marx, Caroline Marx
represent representing the United States of America, got the gold
(01:07:18):
baby in surfing in Tahiti, living the life large over there.
Last night we had a lot of cool stuff at
the track. There's gonna be a lot of stuff today
at the track. This right here is Valerie Almonds. She
is the discus champion and the defending champion when it
comes to the discus at the Olympics.
Speaker 36 (01:07:40):
Sixteen final proman. She was two time Olympic champion in
the discus.
Speaker 2 (01:07:57):
Yeah, she heaved that two time discus champion and it
was uh man, I tell you what, like watch it
because I watched the shot putters this weekend and the
rain was coming down and they kept fowling and fouling
over and over again. They couldn't get a good throw
because it was so wet. And I watched the hammer
(01:08:17):
throw and of course the javelin. The thing that's unique
is if you've not watched, there's these little remote conjuryed
cars that bring all of their stuff back to them.
So you throw the hammer, you throw the javelin, the
shot put in the discus, they put it in these
little cars and they zip them back to them and
they're just little remote control cars, which is awesome. Last night, though,
(01:08:38):
if you've never been to a track and field event,
a big one, it is awesome to go to. I've
been to a couple in Britain. They're amazing because it's
it's first of all for ADHD people. Is great because
there's always something going on. You can watch the track
and on the inside of the track they've got the
field and they're they're doing the high jump, they're doing
the pole vault, they're doing the discus. There's so much
stuff going on, but when some of the big stuff happens,
(01:09:02):
they calm it down. And last night, this guy, this
Mondo character, Monto de Plantis, is the best pole vaulter
in the world. Not to be confused with the French
guy who the other day you guys didn't see, didn't
make his jump because of his of his pole vault
that's attached to his body. Knocked it over and yeah,
(01:09:23):
that was everywhere. This guy, though, decided, okay, I've already
won the gold, let's set a world records.
Speaker 37 (01:09:35):
The world record holder does it again.
Speaker 2 (01:09:39):
Everything to perfection. Look at that extension he.
Speaker 38 (01:09:44):
Needs down to exactly what they needed to do in
order to jump there the world record. At the end
of the Olympic competition, with so much room to spare,
the chosen one mondo the plantis what more can you say?
Speaker 2 (01:10:03):
Well, I think the French guy felt like I would
have had room to spare too if it wasn't from
a unit. The most entertaining, though stuff is finding out
who some of these athletes are. And I've enjoyed watching that.
But she's not being talked about the way she should be.
Over the weekend, I watched the road race because I
(01:10:23):
got up early and I was just I was watching
golf and Scotti Scheffler won. It was just so awesome,
you just can't Scotty's the greatest, just amazing, and watching
him have a motion and the crying was awesome. But
I watched a bit of the road race and I thought,
oh my god, we're going to the first time we'd
run a race in forty years in the road race
in cycling, and it was amazing.
Speaker 27 (01:10:42):
A glorious ride for the gold medal for the American
Kristin Faulkner from the small town of Homer, Alaska making
the turn across the sin She is the genuine article
and Kristin Faulkner in the shadow of the Eiffel Tower
with a landmark US gold medal in no women's world race.
Speaker 2 (01:11:02):
Yeah, she wasn't even suposed. First of all, she wasn't
supposed to be on the team. She got picked a
month ago because somebody else dropped out, decided to focus
on something else, so they pick her. Okay, well, you're like, well, good,
that sounds cool. Her race is the track right the velodrome,
and they're going, you know, and they do team chase,
and so she said, you know, I'm gonna race this race.
She told her team that, but if I don't think
(01:11:24):
I can win to medal, I'll just basically just cruise
and drop out. She went on to win the medal. Like,
oh man, those people devote their lives to this. Hold
on a second. Here's the great story. She grew up
in Alaskar, Homer, Alaska. She went to Harvard. She was
a rower there. She moved to New York City, gave
up all athletics, started working at a venture capital firm.
(01:11:47):
She about five years ago, about six years ago, took
a beginner cyclist class in Central Park. She started cycling
before work at five am. Then she competed in a
few local tournaments and decided I love this. She quit
her job, moved to California to work full time at
cycling and alas here she is never give on those dreams.
(01:12:09):
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three
at Chad Benson's show, it's your Twitter, You're Instagram and
all of the other stuff right there on the Chad
Benson Show, Snoop Dogg hasn't do you see what he's
getting paid reportedly five hundred thousand a day plus expenses. Oh,
I saw somebody from Gin and Juice to the Olympics
(01:12:30):
in America's favorite guy, Snoop Dogg. You have to love that.
A lot of stuff to get to. In the third hour,
a lot of you texting in about We were talking
about multiculturalism and how it doesn't work, and it doesn't
Some of you are angry because you think multiculturalism and
diversity are the same thing, and they're not. Also a
(01:12:50):
bunch of other stuff to do with the world of
politics and some more Olympics stuff. You know what, We're
not just going to be the political show. We talk
about everything, so deal with it. Okay, this is the
Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (01:13:04):
This is the Chad Benson Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent life,
(01:13:33):
This is Chad Benson.
Speaker 2 (01:13:40):
The pick is in. Let's go live with a second
pick for the Democrats, Barack Obama and Nancy Pelosi choose
Tim Walls of Minnesota. Ooh, that's a surprise. That's an
absolute surprise. Tim Wolves in Minnesota, five foot eight, sixty
year old governor of Minnesota become very progressive in his
(01:14:03):
time as the governor of Minnesota, represented to Congress at
one time, beating the likes of Gil Gutreck, who was
a six time representative, coming in there and surprising him,
grew his political statue from there and then became the
governor of Minnesota. Wow, that is crazy a surprise. Indeed,
(01:14:23):
Tim Walls beats out Josh Shapiro Mark Kelly to be
the VP pick for Kamala Harris. The excitement that is
going on. But also I tell you what those people
in mari A Lago must be thrilled today.
Speaker 33 (01:14:37):
This is a stunning choice. I imagine there's a lot
of cheering at mar A Lago at the moment. Look
Tim Walls, he's no one to scoff at. He unseated
a six term Republican in Congress. He won a conservative district.
He began as a moderate, and then he had a
radical transformation as soon as he got a trifecta in Minnesota.
I think it is fair to call him a progressive
(01:14:58):
in cheap's clothing. When you look, I've got his record
over the last few years. What you see are transgender
surgeries for minors, carbon electrical grid by twenty forty, a
driver's licenses for illegal immigrants in function. His abortion policy
allows abortion and tell birth. These are policies that are
far to the left of America.
Speaker 2 (01:15:18):
Okay, there you go. Then that's the way that they feel.
Does it help maybe it's smidge. Does it hurt in Pennsylvania? Maybe?
Maybe not? Uh how much does vice president really matter?
That's a good question. I don't know, But it really depends.
(01:15:43):
If you're living in the world of extremes, then it
becomes who's the last extreme. It mattered a lot when
Joe Biden was running because Kamalo was going to be
the def you know, de facto president. Eventually he was
not going to be around, so it that mattered more
(01:16:03):
than you know. And you could even say the same
thing about Donald Trump. We have talked about it. The
actuary tables aren't in his favor. But she's sixty, he's sixty. JD.
Vance is younger than all of them, so win for JD.
He wears eyeliner, he does not. What is that about
the weird stuff? By the way, that's one of the
(01:16:24):
reasons they loved Tim Wallas because he calls him weird
all the time.
Speaker 37 (01:16:27):
He calls weird, weird, we'red where he's a weird guy.
That Jdvan's weird, weird, weird, weird, He's out of step
with America, weird, weird, weird. Well, the Trump campaign and
the packs have already fired back.
Speaker 24 (01:16:40):
What could be weirder than signing a bill into law
that requires schools to stop tampons in boys' bathrooms, or
weirder than signing legislation allowing miners to receive sex change operations.
Try electing the man who signed those bills. Vice President
of the United States enter chief weirdo Tim Walls. As
(01:17:03):
governor of Minnesota, Walls supported legislation. It endangers miners, hurts women,
and puts radical ideology ahead of common sense. Now Kamala
wants Walls to enforce those laws on a national scale.
Tim Walls too weird, too radical.
Speaker 2 (01:17:24):
Weird, weird, weird, weird. So we gonna hear a lot
of that. So it's the battle of the weirds, right,
was that new Gingrich's head last week? It's the battle
of the weirds. So that's who the vice presidential pick is.
We're going to move on from that because does it
matter at this moment in time. I don't think it does.
Does it Does it help her in the Midwest because
(01:17:46):
she's gonna be branded as California Kamala right, progressive, Kamala
the chameleon, So maybe it helps a little bit, But
I don't know how much that really helps overall. And
if you're Trump, you focus on a few things. Do
you want you see what she did in California she
(01:18:08):
was a senator, right, You saw what she did when
she was an age. You saw the things running rampant
and chaos and craziness going there. She wants to bring
that progressive insanity to all of America. You should want that.
Then the economy. Focus where it matters, the economy. It's
(01:18:29):
not hard. When somebody asked you a question, you talk
about the economy. This is a professor from sand you
see San Diego, all right, His name is dan Riccato.
Talks about the things that I've talked about, the two
not the two tiered economy rich poor. I'm talking about
the economy of employer employee life in your business compared
(01:18:55):
to life at home, life, paying bills, checking account stuff.
Speaker 5 (01:19:00):
And it's what I call a kitchen table recession. You're right,
technically we're probably not in a recession, and we won't
know that and by the way, until we look backwards.
But I called a kitchen table recession for a reason, Leland,
and that's because many Americans, poll after poll tell us that, yes,
we have a job. Yes the job market is getting
a little bit weaker, but we still think we will
(01:19:21):
have a job.
Speaker 6 (01:19:23):
But the fact is, when.
Speaker 5 (01:19:24):
We sit around our kitchen table to do our budget,
to figure out where our money's going between you know,
ten dollars burritos and eight dollars mini weeks.
Speaker 6 (01:19:32):
We're not making it right.
Speaker 5 (01:19:33):
Our incomes in many ways over the last number of
years having kept pace with inflation. So technically the economists,
you know, shout out to them.
Speaker 6 (01:19:42):
They we may not be.
Speaker 5 (01:19:43):
In a recession, but if you ask your next door neighbor,
she's probably going to tell.
Speaker 6 (01:19:48):
You she is.
Speaker 2 (01:19:49):
And that matters. Stick to the things that matter. People
care about the econom me, inflation, put it all the same.
That's what they're looking at. They're feeling it yesterday. Was
(01:20:09):
this an abration in the market going sideways? Or was
this something that is going to lead us potentially to
a recession. Are we in a position here where we're
going to see the economy just go sideways, stocks start
to crash, people lose their jobs left, right and center?
Or is this just an aberration right? Like, that's what
people are waiting for. They're trying to figure out.
Speaker 13 (01:20:34):
Several factors pleading to the stock market's Monday bloodpath, including
a Friday unemployment rate that's hinting at a recession. But
Gary Schlossberg of the Wells Fargo Investment Institute is trying
to stay optimistic.
Speaker 39 (01:20:45):
We're not looking for a recession just yet. But the
market is going to remain on edge until they get
a clear view of the economy.
Speaker 13 (01:20:51):
Other economists think the FED has waited too long to
pull down interest rates that were raised to keep the
economy from overheating, which is.
Speaker 2 (01:21:01):
You know, are they going to do an emergency FED
meeting in lower rates? Probably not? Should they? It depends
if things go south. So far today you had to
bounce back in Japan, the market is up about three
hundred plus points. Who knows where it'll settle at today.
But tech is an issue because you've got these certain group,
(01:21:24):
these certain seven tech stocks that have kind of driven
a lot of this. We talk about it with Zach
Abraham all the time, the chievestment officer a Bullward. We
talk about the fact that these are great stocks, but
they're also trading so far above where they should be,
through the roof on where they should be.
Speaker 40 (01:21:46):
Warren Buffett he sold half of his steak and Apple again,
Apple a big tech company, one of the beneficiaries there
as well. There is this sense all the things that
have happened over the last eighteen months two years where
stocks are just defied gravity keep going up well that's
just not going to happen forever. And that is what
we saw in the markets on Monday.
Speaker 2 (01:22:06):
Yeah, we did. It's not going to happen forever. I mean,
some of these stocks are trading at twenty and thirty
times earnings and more. Some of them have zero profit,
yet they're trading for ungodly amount of money. So what's
(01:22:26):
that mean, Well, it means you're going to always have
some sort of pullback. Was this a reversal and we're
going to head towards that recession kind of feel? Or
was this just the market starting to right itself. Japan
the Niek was up today. That helps. And then of
course everybody looks at the Fed.
Speaker 39 (01:22:46):
We think there's going to be a lot of uncertainty
out over the next several weeks, given them a slowdown
in the economy. We're not looking for a recession, just
get but the market is going to remain on edge
until they get a clear view of the economy and
how the federal reserves it.
Speaker 2 (01:23:02):
I don't know how they're going to respond to it.
It's going to be very interesting to see how they
play this thing out, because there is a sense that
we are not in a great position. It's not just
us globally. I mean, we are the envy of everybody
else when it comes to the economy, but globally they've
(01:23:22):
been struggling. Inflation is staying pesky, pescially high. Kind of
here too, we've gotten a little love with gas not
being out of but still gases up comparatively to where
it was. You've got all of these things that play
into this, and then, of course the thing that matters most,
which is consumer confidence. How do you feel? And like that,
professor I've been saying for a long time, when you've
(01:23:45):
got your hat on and you're the employer or the employee,
you feel pretty good. Right. The job market's okay, you're
not worried about losing your job. We go on and
on about the stuff that, yeah, it's a little bit
more expensive to do business. That being said, it's being
you know, worrying a little bit of it, the customers
a little bit. We're getting along, there's still business. But
then you go home and you take off that hat,
and all of a sudden you put on the consumer hat,
(01:24:07):
the mom and dad hat, the person got a pay
for bill's hat, and it's expensive and you feel it.
And while you've gotten a raise, or maybe you've bring
in a little bit more money from your business that
you're paying yourself out at. The reality is keeping up
with inflation has become extremely hard. It's that two tiered
kind of employee, employer versus consumer. And if you do
(01:24:29):
not feel confident because you start to think the job
market's faltering, the people are going to start pulling back
on their spending. We talked yesterday. I talked yesterday to
a couple of people about the credit side of stuff,
the credit bomb that is out there waiting to happen.
So you start adding all of that up, it adds
up into uncertainty. Markets don't like uncertainty, and it also
(01:24:53):
adds up to people not feeling as confident, not spending
as much, which slows things down. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson
shows your Twitter focus on the things that matter. Speaking
of the economy, get a free risk review for my
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four Go to Know Your Risk radio dot com. What's trending?
Speaker 1 (01:26:17):
Chad Benson, Joe, you're listening to the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (01:26:31):
Now it's time to find out what's trending. What's trending?
Speaker 41 (01:26:35):
I'm signed James Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Serena.
Speaker 35 (01:26:55):
What treving.
Speaker 2 (01:26:59):
It's I was turning on the old interwebs on this Tuesday.
Shall we start with Yahoo? Kamala Harris, everybody's waiting patiently,
Brenda AYUK football players, Simone Biles, the Olympics, Christiana Hall,
(01:27:20):
Robert F. Kennedy, Junior the Bear, Still the craziest story.
What were you thinking? Why are you talking about this
UK riots? We're going to talk a little bit about
those coming up. That's what happens. Multiculturalism doesn't work. I
just want to point that out to everybody. Been saying
(01:27:41):
it for a long time. Multiculturalism doesn't work. Never has,
never will. Head over to uh, let's go over to Google.
Mondo Duplantis. You don't know he's pole Vaulter broke the
world record yesterday. The Indie Olympics. Luna Alonso, Paraguayan, a swimmer,
(01:28:03):
was kicked out of the village. Apparently she don't follow
the rules. She wanted to go out and have fun
and she wasn't supporting the team, so they kicked her out.
Tim Walls, Minnesota Governor David Lynch all trending, Freddie Freeman
baseball player and his son trending. He's got Gian Baret syndrome.
(01:28:27):
It's kind of been brought to light lately. Oh really, yes, yes, yes,
lots of stuff when it comes to the Olympics, which
I've watched a ton of. I'm not gonna lie to
you guys, been enjoying the hell out of it. And
finally over to Twitter, Kamala Crash, Bangladesh, five nights at Freddy's,
Noah Lyles, lots of Olympic stuff Iran, So everybody braces
(01:28:50):
for that. Everybody's bracing for that. England, UK Riots, Britain
all trending over there on the Magical Twitter three two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show. Is
your Twitter right here in the Chad Benson Show Man,
The UK Riots are crazy. We're going to talk a
(01:29:12):
little bit more about what's going on over there, and
if you're not paying attention, Like I just said, multiculturalism
doesn't work. It does not work. We're going to talk
about why it doesn't work. Coming up in a bit.
Also trending was an attack. Yeah, our bases are being attacked.
Speaker 42 (01:29:32):
We just had confirmation from US officials that a US
military base in Iraq has come under attack from multiple rockets, missiles,
and several US military personnel have been injured in that attack.
No group has taken responsibility, but in recent months US
forces have come under attack from group's allied to Iran.
Not confirmed as of yet, but this attack and its
latest attack in the region really points towards the Middle
(01:29:52):
East being on edge.
Speaker 2 (01:29:54):
On edge, that is an understatement. Who could this be?
Speaker 34 (01:29:57):
Typically they look at one particular group, Kataiba has be Lah.
They're the group that has been prominently backed by Iran.
They are the ones that are most responsible for them
more than one hundred and seventy attacks against US personnel,
both in Iraq and Syria since last October.
Speaker 2 (01:30:12):
Since October, one hundred and seventy attacks against our men
and women on bases throughout the Middle East. That is
just ridiculous. Now what happens from here?
Speaker 34 (01:30:24):
The question now becomes how will the United States military respond?
And based on past practice, I think it is very
likely that we may see some kind of a retaliatory strike. However,
given this, given the climate right now, what's happening with
tin Iran and Israel, and whether Iran will retaliate potentially
against Israel because of the assassination of the Hamas leader
(01:30:45):
in Tehran, I think things have to be seen through
a different prism.
Speaker 2 (01:30:49):
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson shows your Twitter, tweet and a
texta program speaking of uglier. We're going to talk about
what's going on in the UK. Straight ahead Chad Benson,
Joe Such, Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (01:31:18):
Independent Thoughts, Independent Life.
Speaker 12 (01:31:22):
This is Chad Bedson and O came fat, okay, let's
telling me some time? Am I w I eve a
rong time stop, a traffic line at the age a
drain as a shop beds pays.
Speaker 2 (01:31:41):
A wanna out not paying attention what's going on in
the UK? Multi culturalism has failed? What it has failed?
Why is that? Because let's first of all, and I've
(01:32:02):
had several of you say, oh, Chad, I see your point,
and several of you are like, you're a racist and
islamophobe and whatever. I mean, just you're you're those people
are already angry and none of those things. But you're
not gonna believe me, so it doesn't matter. But I'll
explain it to the people who are not offended by everything.
The difference between right, you know, inclusion is we're all
(01:32:26):
a part of this, but we have a common underlying
thing that bond us together. We're American, we're English, we're Irish,
where whatever, you know, wherever you're from, that common thing.
So you may be a Muslim and I may be
a Christian, but we're Americans. You're not here, and I'm not.
(01:32:53):
I'm not here to change who you are. You're not
here to change who I am. And if you've come
to my country, your goal is not to destroy my
country replace it with the things that you think that
this country should have. The battle between the West and
in particular Islam, which everybody's terrified to say, is very real.
(01:33:18):
They have a different belief than we do. They believe
the West is evil and the West is bad. You've
had just unfettered immigration into the places like northern parts
of England, southern parts of England, just all of England,
the entire UK. There's a big protest today in Ireland
(01:33:39):
and it is crazy what's going on over there. So
how did it begin, Well, it began with a stabbing
the other day, a horrific crime. Yes.
Speaker 17 (01:33:51):
So this was triggered by an absolutely just awful event
a couple of weeks ago when three young girls who
had been to a Taylor Swift Aunts you know, class,
were stabbed to death by an individual who for a
while out on social media. It was claimed that the
killer was a Muslim, and that triggered attacks against mosques
(01:34:15):
in Stockport, the town where these girls were killed, and
rioting out on the streets.
Speaker 2 (01:34:21):
It then turned out the killer was not a Muslim.
Speaker 17 (01:34:24):
He was a seventeen year old, but the police made
the unusual step of releasing his name. His parents had
been Rwandan refugees, but he was born in the United Kingdom.
Speaker 28 (01:34:33):
He's British, he's.
Speaker 17 (01:34:34):
Black, but he was born in the United Kingdom. He
is now in custody, But it hasn't stopped these far
right nationalists coming out onto the streets and attacking people
who they think shouldn't be in the United Kingdom, whether
they're there because they're brown or whether they're there because
they're Muslims.
Speaker 2 (01:34:50):
Okay, now, first, she's absolutely right. We don't know anything
about I think the kid is mentally disturbed. He may
be Buslom, he may not. And they released this name
because he turned eighteen, like two or three days after
the incident, so that's why they took the unusual step
to releasing his name. They would have released it anyways.
(01:35:12):
That being said, the ultra rights and the nut jobs
are out there. The National Front, which is a big
ultra right organization, came after me. When I was over there.
We played a prank on one of the guys who
worked at the radio station. It was his idea. His
name was Caesar the Geezer, and these guys are no joke,
(01:35:32):
and Caesar went on vacation and it was just a harmless,
kind of goofy prank that he came up with, and
they thought I got him fired, and so they couldn't
get a hold of Caesar. Caesar was on vacations and
you know, the Maldives or something like that, and they
came after me. I remember getting called into work one
day and I thought, oh my god, what the Goll's
going on? I'm I in trouble and they said, hey,
(01:35:54):
there's two guys standing there. I'm like, they don't look
like HR and they were from Scotland yard talking about
the threats. So they're nutjobs out there and they're causing issues.
Burning down hotel the other day where you had people
inside of it who are of Muslim faith who are
(01:36:14):
their as immigrants. Illegal immigration has run rampant in Britain.
This is bent up frustration over a country that is
losing its soul. People are pissed and angry at what
is going on and what's happening in a lot of
(01:36:35):
these countries. See France and the riots that happened a
few years ago. See what's going on in Scandinavia. People
are moving there, whether it's legal or illegal, and they're
going into their own world and they want to live
their life as what they were before and have nothing
to do with the countries that have accepted them in.
Speaker 16 (01:36:54):
They are living in silos which become ghettos, and they
are completely out of touch with any value use that
I associate with being British. Multiculturalism is not working.
Speaker 2 (01:37:06):
Why would any minority want to with that bottle.
Speaker 18 (01:37:09):
They should all come over here and treat it as
a second place. The fact they can't speak English when
they've lived here for decades isn't something that you should
be afraid to call out.
Speaker 16 (01:37:19):
They are no longer assimilating.
Speaker 2 (01:37:23):
No, and you have to, you absolutely must. That's why
I say we assume that multi culturalism and diversity inclusion
are no. Being diverse is fine, but you have to
have that strength and thread of something you believe in
is the core value of what a nation is. And
(01:37:44):
the British people are saying, look, we're being tossed aside.
You've allowed mass immigration and the legal immigration to come here.
You have turned our cities into danger zones for our women.
We no longer recognize our country. Luten Luton has forty
five mosques. The prayer sign goes out, siren goes out
(01:38:06):
every single day. The joke about some of these places is,
you know, it's little Afghanistan, it's a little Pakistan. But
what happens is they stay in their culture. They never
go outside their culture. They want to live their life
and expand into Britain with their culture and pushing aside
(01:38:30):
British culture. What you're seeing is a bunch of people,
some of them nutjobs who are only out there to
do damage. Others who are just plain frustrated, sick and
tired of watching their nation lose its soul be handed
over to people that have come there illegally, who want
(01:38:51):
nothing to do with the country. That's the other side
of it. They don't want anything to do with the country.
They don't want to participate in the country. They don't
want to love Britain, they don't they want none of
that stuff. That's what I always said. You go ask
most people who've immigrated to this country legally and illegally,
(01:39:13):
the ones that want to be here. They love this country,
They love what this country's all about. My grandfather used
to say, came here from Mexico, and they would talk
about him because you know, he was all about America,
loved America with a stick accent, and he would say
all the time, if I wanted to be Mexican, I
(01:39:33):
would have stayed in Mexico. But I didn't want to
be I wanted to be an American. So the difference
between inclusive and we need to be more great if
you want to be what we are, If you want
to be American, Black, American, White, American, Mexican, American, Hispanic, American, Asian, whatever.
(01:40:00):
If you want to be what we are loves, life, liberty, freedom,
the pursuit of happiness. What are constitutions about? If you
want those things? Fantastic. If your goal is to live
your life your way and have nothing to do with
what America, Britain, France, Scandinavia have to offer, it isn't
(01:40:21):
going to work. That's when multi culturalism fails.
Speaker 6 (01:40:27):
We clearly live lost control of the streets. Now. Is
it time to send in the army at some point?
Probably yes. But if the army will not be sent in,
then the public will have to go in and the
public will have to sort this out themselves, and it'll
be very, very brutal. I don't want them to live here.
I don't want them here. They came under false pretenses,
(01:40:50):
many of them came illegally and continue to come illegally,
and we don't want them here. And I'm perfectly willing
to say that because it needs to be said.
Speaker 43 (01:40:58):
If I hated Australia, hated the Australian people, hated Australian history,
hated the Australian way of life, broke into the country
illegally and spent my time trying to undermine Australia.
Speaker 6 (01:41:09):
Why should I be in Australia?
Speaker 2 (01:41:12):
Douglas Murray there, brilliant and you see a lot of that.
People who come to the West who want no part
of what the West has to offer outside of the
goodies and a better, easier, potential way of life. But
they don't want to contribute and they don't want to
be a part of it. And if that's the goal,
(01:41:35):
then Britain, potentially the United States and others, well you're succeeding.
If the goal is to eventually have people that want
to be a part of this great Western culture, then
you're failing. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four
to twenty three at Chad Benson shows your Twitter tweeted
at its text to program love hearing from all of you.
My pillow right now has deep discounts on map pedo products.
(01:41:59):
How about twenty five dollars stravaganza going on right now? Now,
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Go to my pillow dot com slash Pence and my
pillow dot com slash Benzen. Take advantage of the twenty
five dollars extravaganza going on right now, we'll wrap it
up straight. EDG. Chad, that's the job.
Speaker 35 (01:43:10):
Hashtag me too, hashtag immigration reform, hashtag help.
Speaker 20 (01:43:14):
I'm trapped in a hashtag factory and I can't get
out the Chat Benson Show.
Speaker 44 (01:43:19):
The team and its veteran kicker, who helped propel the
Chiefs to Super Bowl champions have reached a deal on
a four year contract extension worth nearly twenty six million dollars,
the largest contract ever for an NFL kicker. Butker made
waves back in May with his commencement speech at a
Catholic school in Kansas, addressing the female graduates. Many critics
called for the Chiefs to release him, but Patrick Mahomes
(01:43:41):
and coach Andy Reid quickly defended Bucker's right to his opinions.
Speaker 2 (01:43:46):
Yeah, because we live in America and we're like, hey,
you're allowed to have opinions, and they're like, the controversy
was a controversy. He talked about, is Catholic upbringing who
he was having children? I mean, is this where we
are now where having children is controversial? Yes, staying home
(01:44:08):
and being a mother is very controversial. It's so ridiculous.
He praised the women, said some of you are gonna
go be fortune five hundred CEOs maybe President who knows.
But it wasn't enough because he had an opinion, and
you know, you're not allowed to have an opinion anymore
(01:44:28):
unless it goes with well, you know, the insane left.
Simone Biles, she got a silver. She fell off the
beam yesterday. Sucks. Very happy. She's gonna smile on her face.
Speaker 45 (01:44:41):
You're smiling here. You smiled a lot, yeah this week.
Like there's pressure. This is the Olympic Games. Yeah, there's
pressure in watching you the other games. It's not like
your smile was showing a different joy in these games.
Speaker 15 (01:44:52):
Why Because I'm a lot happier and I chose to
do this. So at the end of the day, whatever
happens happens. But I'm in a good spot mentally and physically,
so you can't take that away from me. So whenever
I'm out there, it's just like pure joy. Can't believe
I'm out there again, competing, representing my country, just having
fun doing what I love.
Speaker 2 (01:45:11):
And the question with her and something like Katie Ladecci
is will they be back? Have we seen the lat now?
Katie Ladecci is kind of already said. Look, you know,
chance to win on your home home soil, you have
to do that. I feel the same with her, chance
to win on your home soil. You gotta think about that,
don't you. You have to go It's hard to turn down.
(01:45:34):
That's a hard thing to turn down, a chance to win. Yeah,
you might want to do it. You might want to
go for it, just maybe, just maybe. And speaking of
things that are happening today, before we get to our
stupid information, if you guys haven't heard, we have a
choice for vice president. I repeat, we have a choice
(01:45:55):
for vice president. And he is tall that her pick.
Speaker 26 (01:46:02):
Is Minnesota Governor Tim Walls, one of the three finalists
and one of the two finalists actually as of last
night that we have been talking about, Sarah. Just to
put this in the bigger context for folks who are
tuning in, this is a pick by the Harris campaign
and by the vice president to go after these Midwestern, rural,
(01:46:23):
moderate white voters, particularly in the middle of the country.
These are voters, many of whom had swung away from
Democrats and to Donald Trump back in twenty sixteen, also
in twenty twenty, and it is a choice that is
squarely aimed at the blue Wall stats at the Harris
campaign and formally the Biden campaign had talked about so much.
(01:46:45):
It is an attempt to try to engage and win
those Obama to Trump voters.
Speaker 2 (01:46:51):
We'll see if that happens. He's very progressive. He got
very progressive when he became governor and went from being
moderate to uber progressive. So we'll see. We'll see exactly
how this plays itself out. Is it exciting? It was
a surprise, But if you right now are in the
(01:47:14):
Trump camp, you gotta smile on your face because Josh
Shapiro I think would have been a much tougher, tougher
battle for the Republicans because part of it, maybe it's
a small fraction that helps win a state. But what
you're trying to do is that vice presidential candidate needs
(01:47:35):
to be your attack dog, needs to come out and
set the pace for you, and Josh Shapiro, I thought
would have done it in a much better way. It's
that time of the show. People. We learned a little
stupid information and.
Speaker 24 (01:47:45):
Then I go and spoil it all by saying something stupid.
Speaker 2 (01:47:50):
It will take stupid pills this morning.
Speaker 14 (01:47:52):
It's the honest ones you want to watch out for
because you can never predict they're going to do something
incredibly stupid.
Speaker 44 (01:48:00):
You're the fact stupid one with the big mouth is
stupid little Last time.
Speaker 42 (01:48:05):
You should never underestimize the predictability of stupidity.
Speaker 6 (01:48:09):
Now it's time fall stupid information.
Speaker 2 (01:48:17):
It's Olympics. We're having a lot of fun with the Olympics.
Got some interesting information. A lot of people winning golds.
I won my tenth, I won my disk. I've want
than that. It's amazing, right, it's incredible. Winning a gold
is awesome. But there are some things that only a
few people have ever done. Philip Noel Baker. It's the
only person who have won both an Olympic medal and
a Nobel Prize. No Baker, British diplomat and amateur athlete,
(01:48:39):
won a silver medal in the fifteen hundred in the
Summer Games, and in nineteen fifty nine he received the
Nobel Peace Prize for his work towards peace and cooperation
during the twentieth century. Three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four twenty three tweet at his text the program
I love hearing from every single one of you. I
do Kobe Brant. He won a not one, but two,
(01:49:01):
but he also won an Oscar for his short animation.
And now you know something you didn't know about the Olympics. Man,
I tell you what chaos and craziness? Am I corrector?
Am I correct? Now? I'm just kidding. Oh wait, yeah,
potential war stocks up a little bit, feel a bit unsteady,
and we've been attacked in the Middle East. That nobody's
(01:49:21):
really talking about a lot of that stuff. Oh and
Tim Walls, the uber progressive but supposedly right for America.
Minnesota governors now the pick for vice president. And it's
just Tuesday people. You guys have a blessed rest of
your Tuesday. I'm not really a fan of Tuesdays.
Speaker 1 (01:49:38):
We know that.
Speaker 2 (01:49:39):
Go get yourself some tacos. Night night Jack.
Speaker 1 (01:49:41):
This is the Chad Benson Show.