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September 9, 2025 • 109 mins
Trying to make sense of the North Carolina train murder. Pig kidney transplants and the ethics of selling organs. Military analyst Mike Lyons talks the latest from the Russia/Ukraine conflict, U.S. military action in Venezuela, and Israel's next move in Gaza. Jeffrey Epstein's 50th "Birthday Book." 3I Atlas and UAPs. Couple celebrates first baby girl born into the family in 108 years. Americans who who have positive view of capitalism slips to 54% according to new Gallup poll.
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Episode Transcript

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

Speaker 2 (00:15):
Is this really about crime? Is it really about a
young Ukrainian woman who was killed by a nut job? No,
it's about clicks, it's about likes, it's about all of
that kind of stuff. It's about saying the most absurd
thing to get people to pay attention to you. It's
not about what happened in Charlotte on light Rail at all.

(00:40):
Never is like twenty things I could play here. Well,
it's the hard Right's the only one paying attention to this, Chad,
you gonna understand something. If it wasn't for them and
the MAGA, we would never know about this. Okay, I'm
not saying it's not a story. But are we having

(01:00):
a conversation about, like, what can we do to fix this? No,
because nobody's interested in that. Both sides of the political
aisle love to make noise. They love a show. Trump's
really big into the show. He's big into all this
stuff all the while the fix nobody cares about. Nobody does.
And the other side of it is you can't have

(01:21):
a conversation about what might be the actual fix because
we also still dealing with feelings. Okay, so there's that too.
So you got that going on, and all the maga
folk are out there going this is it's a racist crime. No,
it's a nut job. It's a whack of do It's
a guy who's in and out of prison eleven I

(01:44):
mean jail, eleven, twelve, thirteen, fourteen times. He'd been arrested,
been in prison for five years, diagnosed schizophrenic, on a
train he shouldn't have been on, looking like he was
pissed and angry at the world, agitated before he did

(02:07):
the heinous crime on a young twenty three year old
from Ukraine who escaped the war as a refugee, came
here and was trying to live her life. Very little
is being talked about that. It's all about, well, it's
racism if you dare bring up the color of his skin. Now,

(02:31):
it's mental illness. By the way, crazy comes in all shades.
In case you guys didn't know that, I've known crazy
in every color. There's all kinds of crazy out there.
That's what this is. I didn't think he targeted her

(02:51):
because she was white. How do you know that? Because
he's nuts. He could have thought she was a giant bug. Well,
now you're just dismissing it. No. The problem we don't
have enough mental illness facilities. We don't have enough care

(03:12):
for people who shouldn't be on the street, shouldn't be
around people, let alone on a bus or a train
or walking down the street with a weapon. It's scary
when you know that the largest mental health facility in

(03:33):
America is the Twin Towers, La County Jail. That's the
largest mental health facility. That's the kind of place where
we're talking about people should be nowhere near being on
the streets, and you know what, most of them, at
some point in time will But you see in the
world of influencers, and this is where I go wrong.

(03:54):
I tell my wife this all the time. Get frustrated
because I don't go WHA could do. I can't do it.
I can't run out there and scream and yell he's
oh my god, it's about this, or it's about that,
and just yell and scream. It's be easy to do.
I don't have to get up early, right, it could
be super easy to do. I could just get up

(04:15):
right before the show and just find two or three
explosive headlines and run with it all the way. But
I don't do that. I want to find a fix.
The fix is we have a mental health problem. We're
not funding it. We're not going to fund it. It's
been this way since even before Reagan. But Reagan, you know,
was a big part of it. Carter Reagan. We go

(04:36):
back and look, there was nothing and walk a government
right like remember what Reagan goes, we were gonna do Ambassy.
It's only gonna be this once. And we've got all
these fixes though after we get this done and then
nothing was done. That's that's what we do. And so
it's just easy to come on and go, you know what,
he's black, he hates white people, and everybody goes, yeah,
that's right. And because you're playing to a fringe audience

(04:58):
that's loud and quite frankly most of the time ridiculous,
that's what gets clicks and likes.

Speaker 3 (05:04):
They've been looking for opportunities to make this some sort
of like reciprocal George Floyd situation. And that's the part
that I think he's almost giving away the game. And
it's sad to see a lot of people going along
with it.

Speaker 4 (05:20):
You know, I need to say a couple of things.

Speaker 5 (05:21):
One is, I mean, what happened to that young woman
was horrible, and it's everybody's nightmare if you're in any
public space, subway, whatever, that something bad's gonna happen to
you or somebody you care about.

Speaker 4 (05:31):
So it does strike a chord.

Speaker 5 (05:33):
We don't know why that man did what he did,
and for Charlie Kirk to say we know he did
it because she's white, when there's no evidence of that,
it's just pure race mongering, hate mongering.

Speaker 4 (05:45):
It's wrong.

Speaker 5 (05:46):
Then he says that if something like that had happened
the other way, there'd be sweeping changes and polls on society.
Where is the George Floyd Policing Act. It didn't pass.
Even when you had a white police officer order a
black man on live television, the whole world saw. There
were no sleeping changes. In fact, not one law was
past at the federal level. So I think that's an

(06:09):
important thing to point out.

Speaker 2 (06:11):
That's true because nobody wants to fix on anything. I mean,
let's be honest, we don't care. And by the way,
it wasn't race baiting. It was business. Charlie Kirk and
all of them they say it because it's business. Are
there a few out there that probably believe that, Yeah
do a lot of their followers believe some of that.

(06:33):
They might, but for the most part, her death, his
heinous crime. It's business talking about what happened. It's business,
and there are real issues that need to be addressed here.
But there are some issues you can't talk about. Case
in point, last night, the debate on News Nation normally
doesn't get out of control, and it's hard to listen

(06:54):
to these things. And this is why I don't go
on these shows, because he yelled back and forth and
we don't hear anything. But I think it's a perfect
example of modern media, how you have to be louder
and more insane to get people to pay attention.

Speaker 6 (07:09):
Don't true the family in general, you can point to
I don't know that one race over the other worlds.

Speaker 7 (07:14):
This is also true for the murderer, the two young children,
black men.

Speaker 8 (07:20):
Well, you listen to what I'm saying.

Speaker 7 (07:21):
I literally said, he broke a nuclear family, families, families that.

Speaker 2 (07:29):
You singled out.

Speaker 6 (07:30):
You singled out black families. But if families, it's.

Speaker 1 (07:35):
Especially evident to the black community.

Speaker 7 (07:38):
You know what true that the absence that young man
more likely put you guys.

Speaker 6 (07:44):
I'll put you guys on a text thread.

Speaker 2 (07:46):
Put us together.

Speaker 6 (07:47):
I'll put you I'm open to I'll put you together.
Liz is open a conversation. Let's do Nina's open a conversation.
That's why we're all here. It's not an easy conversation
to have, but it's an important.

Speaker 2 (07:58):
Yes, it's important. And she's right in the fact that
we have a broken family. She's right in the fact that,
in particular in the black community, there is a broken family.
Go look at single mothers. We've talked about this all
the time. You want to solve the crime problem, Well,
it starts at home. It starts by having a home,
not having kids out of wedlock. It starts by fathers

(08:21):
being in the home and doing the right thing. It
starts by that. In many, many cases, we can go
and show fatherless homes. And how many times have we
talked about this when it comes to fatherless homes. We've
played this over and over again. Maybe we'll play for
you right here to give you an example. This isn't
about whether or not you get love at home from
your mother or your aunt, or your cousin or your grandma.

(08:43):
It's not about that. It's about the father in particular.
And if you don't think that's true, listen to these stats.

Speaker 9 (08:51):
The more opportunity the child has to interact with biological father,
the less likely they are to commit the crime or
have contact with the juvenile justice system.

Speaker 1 (08:58):
Okay, another way to say that.

Speaker 9 (08:59):
Is men and women who are incarcerated, the population of
the prisons mostly encompass fatherless homes. Now here's something that
no one else has mentioned, which I think is cool,
and I don't really say this eloquently. If a man
and wife raise a child, they're less likely to end

(09:20):
up in jail, but they have the same statistical chance
as children raised by just their father.

Speaker 2 (09:29):
That's not racism, that's honesty. That's not racism. That's facts
and data. And what we see when we're trying to
figure out what to do with crime, in particular in
the inner city, in particular amongst Black America, and why
we talk about Trump and the surge of crime and
all these kind of things, what we see or kids

(09:50):
who have no fathers, whose mother are struggling, who's probably
in many cases raised with the help of grandma or
maybe only grandma, and they are easy pray for gangs
and for crime and they make that choice, and then
we have this over and over again. The fix isn't easy.

(10:11):
And because it isn't easy, it's not going to get clicks,
and it's not going to get likes. It's not going
to get any of those things. So it's just easier
to go that guy killed that girl because well he's racist.
Frustrating three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to
twenty three at Chad Benson shows your actu insta, YouTube, Facebook,
and more. A lot of stuff to get today, including.

Speaker 10 (10:31):
Trump and Epstein were friends for more than a decade,
but when Epstein was arrested in twenty nineteen, Trump said
the two men hadn't spoken in fifteen years. In the
so called birthday book included letters from other Epstein friends
and associates, including former President Bill Clinton, at that point
just two years out of office, writing about Epstein's childlike

(10:52):
curiosity and drive to make a difference. After Epstein's twenty
nineteen arrest, a spokesperson for Clinton said, the president knows
nothing of his crimes.

Speaker 2 (11:02):
Well you might know something now made a little hearsay.
This isn't going away, and now a bunch of people
are gonna get dragged into it. So if Trump thinks
it's going away and the Dems are excited about this
because they don't care about Clinton anymore. Right, the Clinton
have lost their power. I have news for you. This
is going to get uglear faster and we should know

(11:25):
the truth. You want America to trust you, treat us
like adults. Tell us the truth. Three two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Ed Benson shows your
Extra Instant YouTube, Facebook and more. Also got a buddy,
Mike Clon's joining in the program a little bit. We're
going to talk to about what's going on in Venezuela
with the Marines and the Americans. You don't move that
many soldiers Marines in particular, and not expect something. So

(11:46):
we'll have his take on it coming up a little bit.
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Speaker 1 (13:09):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (13:12):
I've said it for a long time. I think you
should be able to sell your organs. What I know,
right that seems so dangerous. Stick with me, though, And
I'm not talking about selling your heart or any of
that stuff. Your liver. You can sell a portion of
your liver. It grows back. Some of you're gonna look
that up because you don't believe me. It's true. You
got two kidneys, they're good. You want to sell it.

(13:32):
I don't have a problem with it. I think you
should be able to. We're at the point now where
we're doing pig kidneys. We're doing pig kidneys.

Speaker 11 (13:41):
Doctors in Mass General in Boston say they successfully perform
three separate transplants of pig kidneys into humans, and now
the FDA is giving the green light for clinical trials.
The FDA green light means thirty patients nationwide will now
be able to receive a genetically modified pig kidney. With
more than ninety thousand Americans the need of kidney transplants,
there's a lot of interest. Researchers are already breaking records.

(14:03):
Another Mass General patient has lived more than seven months
with his pig kidney, far longer than the previous one
hundred and thirty day benchmark pig kidneys.

Speaker 2 (14:13):
We have a shortage in this country of kidneys, and
I don't see why liver kidney. You shouldn't be able
to eat yours? Right's your body, Let me do what
I want with it. Why you shouldn't be able to well, Chad?
And then rich people will take advantage of poor people.
If I'm offering you a service and you're willing to pay,

(14:34):
you know, a quarter of a million dollars to get
a kidney to save your life for a better quality
of life, well it could be ghoulish. Look this is
until we finally come to the realizations, like all right, look,
here's the deal. Okay, we can build human bodies that
are just for organs. They won't have any brains, but

(14:55):
we're going to keep them alive and we're just going
to harvest their organs and when we need something, we
take it. We're not there yet because I don't think
anybody knows how to come out and actually say it,
because it seems like a sci fi creepy movie. But
the reality is, I don't know why not. And it's weird, right,
Like a lot of these things. We could donate it,
but we can't sell it. What but the donation comes

(15:18):
with a little bit of this, Like you get a
one hundred dollars gift card to Chili's. I don't know
what you can get something stupid? No, if it can help,
then why not think about allowing it? Until we start
growing the bodies inside of a laboratory and they're just
gonna be in these giant, huge like glass things and
it's like, ah, so and so needs a kidney. Somebody's
gonna run over there and get the kidney. Until then,

(15:41):
let me know what you think. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show.
It's your acts, your instant are doing the Chad Benson Show.
And I know it sounds callous. And of course last
week we were talking about was it g and Putin
talking about and how they've got all these organs they
can use. I'm not talking about what they do, but

(16:01):
I just look at this in a way where and
you have a chance to get the American dream and
somebody's willing to give you five hundred grand for your kidney,
and you got another kidney, and you'll be fine, and
you figure, you know, twenty years from now, they'll have
figured something else out. But this person needs it today.

(16:24):
You're going about it all wrong. You want this thing
to work, turn it into capitalism. The ultrue, you know,
tuistic way that we view it is, oh, well, you
donate to somebody. How many times you heard people's like,
oh I tried to be a donor for my friend,
but I couldn't because we didn't match. And they're like,
we have somebody else in Omaha, though the needs are
like yeah, sorry, what if that guy was paying three

(16:47):
hundred grand? You're like, well, I think about that. Everybody's
got a price. It sounds ghoulish, but why not have
the conversation? And three D printing's going to help a
lot with stuff, But why not have this conversation. I
think it's a fair conversation. Conversation app people will freak
out about it. Don't let me know what you think.

(17:07):
Coming up next, our buddy Mike Lion's military analysts talk
to us about Ukraine, Israel, all the stuff going on.
You're missing the show. Shame when you grabbed the podcast
chat Benson.

Speaker 12 (17:15):
Show Sun Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (18:00):
At the time of the week, we talked to the
best damn military handlists in the business, Mike Lyons, retired
major in the Army and military analysts for US and others,
but mostly just for US. Let's start first and foremost
man Ukraine. The hits are getting bigger. Russia doesn't seem
to be going anywhere back and down, and they're indiscriminately

(18:20):
just throwing everything they can everywhere. This is going to
get way uglier for the next several weeks, isn't it.

Speaker 13 (18:27):
Yeah, Chat, you know I said last week, you know,
you know, Russia just launched the largest drone and missile
striking against Ukraine, while you know, this morning we say
the same thing. They just launched the largest one, bigger
than the one last that was last week. These strikes continue,
They're on government sites, they're starting to hit Kiev. I
don't you know the president is you know, I thought

(18:49):
he would have been doing something by now, and what
he's planning on doing won't stick. These economic sanctions won't
make them stop. I mean, we've talked about the leverage
has never been there for Russia to stop the European
Nation thought, the European Union thought that that what is
going to take place, and there was going to be
some progress. There just doesn't look like it's going to happen.

(19:10):
And so on the other side. Weapons have to pour in,
air defense platforms need to pour in.

Speaker 4 (19:14):
We have to let Ukraine go deep strike.

Speaker 13 (19:16):
Now they are hitting some of their industrial capability that
Ukraine is and you're seeing that, but it's just still
Mother Russia. I mean, they're just not There's just still
not enough leverage on them to stop fighting at this point.

Speaker 2 (19:30):
Now you said let them go deep do we have
to get to the point where we say, all right, look,
here's the deal what we are hoping for, which is
you know, the pressure on you know, India and a
bunch of other people that would stop them buying oil.
Their machine couldn't get funded and they would come to
the table. That isn't working. So you guys outside of
hitting Moscow feel free to do whatever the hell you

(19:51):
need to do, to do something to try to shake
the cobwebs out of his ears and get him to
come to the table and listen to what people have
to say.

Speaker 13 (20:00):
Well, you know, you look at the history of warfare,
and at some point you have this, you know, civilian
military bleedover where while targets are clearly designed for military
that civilians are impacted more. Look what's going on in Israel,
for example, and how Israel's trying to thread that needle there,
but there's clearly civilian casualties taking place. I don't think

(20:22):
that's happening at all inside of Russia. For a lot
of different reasons. They're concerned about targeting civilian places where
there's build up factories, for example, those are potentially should
be military targets.

Speaker 4 (20:35):
I don't think Ukraine has done that.

Speaker 13 (20:37):
And so again look at the history of warfare, and
there's some internal pressure sometimes that's put on those countries
in order to decide to come to the table. That
hasn't taken place here in Russia at all, and so
maybe that's where it's got to be. But because you're
seeing Russia do just that, they're targeting civilian government offices
that are fundamentally defenseless. The fact that they've got to

(20:57):
bring air defense systems back now to Key in order
to defend those cities and defend that cities means that
the troops on the front lines are now much more exposed,
and so there's just no not a good situation on
good solution for the current tactical situation inside Ukraine.

Speaker 2 (21:14):
Talking to Mike Clion's military analysts, we talk about all
the stuff going on globally when it comes to war,
and there's plenty of it. You know. I feel like
Europe and US have put these parameters on Hey, Ukraine,
you can defend, but we really don't want you attacking
because he's got nukes and we don't want this thing

(21:35):
to you know, spill out into something insane. And I
feel like they're fighting in this kind of this little
box here comparatively to like you said. I mean, Botin
doesn't care about civilians. He'll bomb buildings, he just doesn't
care about that. And do they have to have those
kind of you know, shackles taken off and allow them

(21:56):
to kind of do that, so maybe they start to
feel it back at home with civilian deaths.

Speaker 4 (22:02):
Yeah, I think that's exactly right.

Speaker 13 (22:03):
I think that that there has to be some internal
pressure inside of Russia if Ukraine decides to go after
factories and go after places where there'll be civilian casualties
that are still you know, we can, we can cavel
about whether they're military targets or not, but.

Speaker 4 (22:18):
They have to do that.

Speaker 13 (22:19):
I think that that will push potentially Russia to start
to think twice. But it's going to take a lot
of range. It's going to take more different kinds of
missile systems or Russia's eleven time zones. They have people
in all different places. They have this advantage of moving
their logistical supply chains well outside of what was formerly

(22:39):
the range of Ukraine capability, in particular artillery. But we
can continue to give them weapons that can continue to
reach that if we choose to do that. We haven't also,
you know, the logistics of getting them there now with
six to eight months, there's there's no question that we
need to ramp up our militarization and some of our

(22:59):
stuff piles. I'm reading reports of US expending almost twenty
five thirty percent of our air defense systems that that
would be used to defend US in other countries there.
So again, at some point there'll be a tipping point
with all sides where the President will recognize understand it's
going to take more than just what he's doing right
now to get Russia to stop.

Speaker 2 (23:18):
What's Europe's role in this? What more can they do?
Because it seems like we're pushing them to do more.
They're trying to do a little bit more. But what
more can they do? You know, because yeah, they've got
their military side of stuff, the hardware they can give them,
but what else are they going to be able to do?

Speaker 13 (23:34):
So right now, their commitment is really only troops when
Russia agrees to allowing a security for US. But that's
that's the you know, the long poll in the tenth
they won't allow that at this point. So the fact
that European Europe has done that, it's good. I think,
you know, the German Chance Dollough has already come out
and said this war is going to go on for
a long time, and so it's you know, those economies

(23:59):
still remain to be challenged to support from a military aspect.
I mean, look what's going on in the UK right now.
They have their own they have their own internal problems,
specifically with the immigrants. You know, that's the other thing.
Look at Poland and look at some of the countries there.
Europe military issues also have this refugee issue, and it's

(24:21):
refugee politics that are tied to what they're doing militarily
because because of the refugee problem the past four years
that's taking place in the immigration from from Syria and
these Middle Eastern countries and to Europe, a lot of
that money that could have went to defense has now
gone to those social programs. And I think that, you know, Russia,

(24:41):
Poland has done a very good job of weathering that storm,
but some of these other European countries have not.

Speaker 4 (24:47):
And I think that's uh, you.

Speaker 13 (24:49):
Know, refugee politics are now going to come to play
with regard to these European nations supporting what's going on
in Ukraine.

Speaker 2 (24:56):
Talking to Mike Lions military analysts, as we talk about
all things when it comes to the military globally, there's
a lot of conflicts that either are brewing, seemed to
be brewing, or about ready hopefully to end. What did
you make last week of the big coming together of
China Russia? MODI was there. You had the little fat guy,
the rocket guy, Kim Jong un. What did you make

(25:16):
of that? And what did you make of the parade?
Because I will say this, our fighters, our fighters were
not great marchers. China's marchers are pretty pretty marchy.

Speaker 4 (25:25):
Yeah, that's a good point.

Speaker 13 (25:27):
You know, for sure, it projects from their perspective what
they perceived to be great power. I don't think it's funny.
I don't think the Indians showed up for that parade.
They were smart enough to recognize that wouldn't be a
good picture to take. You had Mody involved in the
backside of that coalition of the Unwilling whatever they're calling
it these days. But that Victory Day parade I think

(25:47):
was more ambition than it was anything else. You know,
those parades were held in the Soviet Union in the past,
and in some cases they were just built up weapons systems.
They weren't even actually that, you know, there was nothing
behind them. The three major nations, right you know, Russia,
North Korea, China. I mean they don't they don't even
speak the same language. I'm not even not worried about

(26:09):
a military perspective, because they couldn't even get on the
same radios, you know, they couldn't. They couldn't actually put
a military together and do anything. I really believe that
it's Beijing trying to project more power over Russia, which
at some point will fracture. I mean, these are adversaries
that have been adversaries in the DNA for hundreds of years.
It's not that all of a sudden they're going to

(26:30):
get together to try to dominate the rest of the world.
When they recognize that just can't happen. President Trump feels
that this is all about economics, and they couldn't.

Speaker 4 (26:39):
China needs us.

Speaker 13 (26:40):
Maybe so maybe the three thousand walmarts throughout the United
States and all the stuff that we continue to import
from China is all part of that their economy.

Speaker 4 (26:49):
But we just have to see.

Speaker 2 (26:51):
Talking to my client's military analysts, we talk about all
things when it comes. We've talked about the Ukraine. Now
let's move over Venezuela. We touched on the last week.
Now a lot of people are talking about it. Starting
to get news now that we've blown up allegedly a
you know, a drug, you know, boats or whatever it was,
you know, trying to get here. We don't move ships
the way we've moved them, and we don't move troops

(27:12):
the way we've moved them without some worry about something
that may happen, and nobody's really paying that much attention
to it.

Speaker 13 (27:19):
Yeah, great point, And I'm a little bit concerned about this,
and it's almost you know, you saw also the Secretary
of Defense or whatever he's called himself today is now
pushing for this new strategy that shifts attention away from
China and Russia to defending the homeland western the Western hemisphere.

Speaker 4 (27:36):
I saw a paper come out. I'm just shaking my head.

Speaker 13 (27:39):
Is this kind of like some kind of play with
regard to you know, just projecting power in you know,
in South America? But it just doesn't make any sense.
I mean, when he needs the military to go after
the drug cartels is another one of these crazy missions
that you know, we could try to cut off boats
and blow them up as we saw on the sea there,
but we're going to take Marines and then vay Venezuela.

(28:00):
I don't get it. I don't know where where this
is kind of going. I'm not sure this is this
threat that's doesn't really make sense that the military uses
is being used in that mission. But no, for sure,
this mission is being intensified there putting a lot of
pressure on the Navy.

Speaker 4 (28:13):
The Navy does not need this this mission.

Speaker 13 (28:16):
They they need to focus in the Pacific, They need
to project the power gunboat diplomacy in that direction towards
China and protect our allies out there. But for whatever reason,
they've decided to take those the ships in Norfolk and
send them send them a south. I got a little
inside information on that, and I think that there's real
concern there that they're being oversubscribed. But but this pivot

(28:38):
to the to the Venezuela and South America is is
a little surprising to.

Speaker 2 (28:42):
Me, do you I mean, you know, because I've talked
about my buddies who were in the Marines, like, you
don't move marines like that if you're not going to
have them do something, and you're you're moving these people
because you know, whether it's the oil underneath the ground
in Guiana, which of course Venezuela now claims is theirs,
or they really are trying to have a war on drugs.
This feels more than just the usual show.

Speaker 4 (29:03):
Yeah, I'll check. You're right. Those guys are right.

Speaker 13 (29:05):
You don't move marines unless you're going to do something
with them that they don't do well sitting on a
boat rocking around the sea and they want to get
off that boat and go do something. And you know,
at some point you got to bring them back and
you know, a training exercise maybe turns into something else,
but it's definitely you know, maybe they're going to go
to Puerto Rico or something. I don't know, but but again,

(29:27):
there's just there's just too much going on there that
looks like it's focused on this counter narcotic mission. Uh,
and it's being you know, over militarized, and I think
that you know, you're bringing We've seen reports of the
F thirty fives going out there like that, you know,
projecting power to drug cartels that don't have the same
weapons systems. I'm not sure they're going to buy into it.

(29:47):
They're just going to go under ground for a while
and lay low until until the heat comes off.

Speaker 2 (29:52):
Talking to my client's military analyst on more quick question,
we'll touch on what's going on in Gaza. They dropped leaflets,
told everybody to get out of there. Nobody knows where
you've go At this point in time, the West Bank
is now seeming to be the place that could be
the next place to explode. They're opening up the battlefield
and it looks like they're going to try to take

(30:12):
all of Palestine in the West Bank, which I think
opens up a nightmare that if you if you think, okay,
we'll get rid of all the Palestinians and the Arabs
and whoever else is here, and that's going to fix
the problem. We've talked about it. You've got Iran, that's
a very big country, by the way. People forget how
big it is. You've got Jordan, who's already got their
nightmares and they're like you've talked about how poor they are.

(30:32):
You've got Egypt, You've got you know, yehmen, Lebanon. You
have all of this stuff that is ready to just
seem boil over and instability looks like it's going to
take over everything in the Middle East.

Speaker 13 (30:43):
Well yeah, I mean yeah, they want the sweeping evacuation
in Gaza City in particular. They have to go after
those tunnels. Chad, there's that's there, you know, that's their
shield and sword. We've talked about that. And the only
way to do this, I mean, like I saw an analogy.
This is like a hurricane style, you know, escalation. If
they don't get out of there, and this all maybe
stops if Hamas releases the hostages. You know, at the
end of the day, though you don't see any movement

(31:04):
on the side of Hamas to try to settle us
either they're they're not willing to release hostages, they're not
willing to come to the negotiation table you had, you
had the French and the British. I guess it was
that once they just declared, you know, this two state solution,
they thought they had something moving, and then the Palestinians
decided to back away.

Speaker 4 (31:24):
So I think, you.

Speaker 13 (31:26):
Know, Israel's is it's in a race for its its
existence still. I think that they've they've got to do
what they think is right and in this at this point,
you know, the country has not internally, does not have enough,
has not protested this enough.

Speaker 4 (31:42):
I mean, you know what it's like for Israel to.

Speaker 13 (31:44):
Recall sixty thousand National Guard units and hundreds of thousands
on standby. Mean it's a small country. I mean, it's
really affecting their economy. So it appears to me that
the Israeli people are behind this too right now that
that again doesn't look like it's ending anytime soon.

Speaker 2 (31:57):
Love talking to you, brother, He's the best in the business,
tired man and the best dad military analyst round Mike clients.
Thanks so much, brother, Will do it again next week.

Speaker 4 (32:04):
Eight Chat thanks for me three two.

Speaker 2 (32:05):
Three, five three eight, twenty four to twenty three at
Chet Benson shows your acts, your instant, YouTube, Facebook and more.
Bullwork Capital amazing and we can do this. Call eight
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(33:09):
off with thro Trick Financial LLC and SEC Registered Investment Adviser.
Investments of all risk not a guarantee past erformance, dosn't
guarantee future results Trek two five two eight four. Coming
up This Day in History Chad Benson.

Speaker 14 (33:19):
Joe serving up Talk radio medium, rare and dripping with irony.

Speaker 1 (33:34):
It's Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (33:37):
It's that portion of the program where we talk about
things that took place on this day, but not in
this year, because this day in this year is just happening.
We're talking about other September ninth, Going way.

Speaker 1 (33:50):
Back, watch upon in time, a long time ago.

Speaker 15 (33:54):
Now it's time for this day in history. We look
back on this set to find out what the famous
things took place.

Speaker 2 (34:01):
All right, let's find out cool things took place on
this day in history. September ninth. Are you ready for this?
On this day seventeen seventy six, we became the United States,
Well the name did Continental Congress formally adopts the name
of the United States instead of the United Colonies. Eighteen fifteen,
California becomes the thirty first state. Nineteen forty eight, North

(34:24):
Korea is founded. Nineteen fifty six, Elvis Presley mixed his
first appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show sixty million people
tuned in nineteen seventy one, Attica prison riot begins. That
was not a good thing. Bad, that's bad in New York.
You guys remember it. I mean, this was a big deal,
lasted four days and became part of history with how

(34:49):
bad it was. And in nineteen ninety three, Blo in
Israel sign a peace accord in Washington, d C. The
Oslo Accords are signed on the lawn with the yacer
Airfat Itzak Grabin shaking hands under President Clinton's watch. That
was a big deal in more ways than people realize.
And here we are, yo, these many years later, and

(35:12):
yeah we're still talking about that. Israel Palestine. Oh yeah,
I know, right, three, two, three, five, three, eight, twenty
four to twenty three at you had Benson shows, your
ex your instant, you two facebooke and more. Now you
know what happens on this day in history right here
on the Chad Benson Show. Coming up, our number two

(35:38):
of the program. More on what is going on in
the world of crime? And yes, clicks, because that's kind
of what it's all about. Outrage. The outrage culture is
rocking and rolling. We're going to talk about that. What's
a place in Charlotte? And why aren't more people outrage?
Why aren't more people pissed and angry? There's a lot
of reasons. Yeah, the media play roll in it, but

(36:00):
so many people are looking for clicks and likes it,
shares it, tries. Plus, we got your urban word of
the day and we're going to continue. They ask the question,
should you be allowed to sell your kidneys in your liver? Oh?
Missing show, sham When you've read the podcast hour number two,
straight ahead, Chad.

Speaker 1 (36:17):
Benson Jobs, this is the Chad Benson Show, the Chad

(36:42):
Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (36:45):
I'm telling you what's going to happen in Venezuela. It's
going to be interesting. It's not what you think it is.
We talked to Mike Lyons last hour and Pete Hexats
a little bit earlier today.

Speaker 6 (36:57):
How are we doing Warriors?

Speaker 16 (37:01):
I think this might be the single most beautiful picture
I have ever seen in my entire life, looking out
at these faces, looking out at this Caribbean on a
floating island of American power, on the front lines of

(37:24):
defending the American homeland.

Speaker 2 (37:27):
Make no mistake about it. What you're doing right now,
it's not training.

Speaker 17 (37:34):
This is the real world exercise on behalf of the
vital national interests of the United States of America to
end the poisoning of the American people.

Speaker 2 (37:48):
Okay, okay, So that's what we're doing there, so there,
so there you go. It's it's a new drug war.
That's what they want, and they're going to take it
to Venice Way. And on top of that, I am
telling you guys, there's more to it. It's not just
about Venezuela and the drugs. Look out for some of

(38:11):
the stuff happening when it comes to the issues with
Guyana and Venezuela and oil. It's never really as they
make it seem to be, if that makes sense. Throwing
that out there. Three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four,
twenty three At Chadminson Show, is your ex your Insta, YouTube, Facebook?

(38:36):
And more so, we're talking about the uh, the crime
and you know, the killing of this young lady who
was brutally murdered by a mentally ill man, and a
lot of you chimed in, and I appreciate that about well,
I can see your point, Chad. It's yeah, it is

(38:56):
a lot about you know, the right talking about racism
and this that and the other and reverse racism and crap.
This race is out there in this because he's black
and she's white, but not racism. Mental illness is the
number one thing in this situation. Mental illness. This is

(39:22):
not a I don't for a second, and this is me.
Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe he's got these writings. We'll find
out about later and I'll be like, wow, I was
wrong about that. But dude is schizophrenic, and he stabs
a woman to death, a young lady, and it becomes
all about the people talking about it and not about

(39:44):
the fix and not about her. So a woman who's
twenty three years old, you think about this, escape to
your homeland, okay, at twenty three, comes over here. It's
been here a few years. This is a woman who
left because her homeland was under attack. This young woman

(40:06):
was twenty three, Ireinya Zarutska, and she was brutally murdered.
She had come here to build to save her life
scape the war in Ukraine to die on the streets
of America inside of a light rail where nobody was

(40:29):
paying attention at all. Nobody did anything, I mean, talk
about what are we doing here? And not all of
it is because people were scared or didn't care. Half
of it was people weren't paying attention, get their heads down,
get the earbuds in, looking forward, blinders on, weren't looking
in the other direction. So but once he was up,

(40:53):
moving around and there's blood everywhere and all this stuff,
nobody did anything. He'd been arrested earlier this year, by
the way, for schizophrenia, no interaction before the incident, and
yet it's become this big thing and everybody's like, well,
it's because George Floyd and this is a Georgia and

(41:15):
the battle that's going on. Look, Republicans and Democrats, you
both have failed. You both have failed at trying to
get a fix on the root cause of the issues
when it comes to crime, fatherless homes, crappy schools. You know,
the Republicans have just kind of abandoned the inner city

(41:40):
and said, eh, Democrats have done the same thing because
they know, ah, we got the black vote. We're not
going to pay attention to this, and this became more
about the maga folk out there being able to say,
look at what's going on here, it's evil, it's bad.

Speaker 18 (41:53):
Unfortunately, Jesse, I think it's perfectly obvious why the media
deep six is this particular story. And the answer is
perfectly obvious when you look at the races of the
people involved. If this had been a black victim and
a white perpetrator, then it would have led the news
nightly for months on end. You would have had riots
in the streets. If it's the reverse situation, the media
will completely ignore it because it doesn't match up with

(42:13):
their preferred narrative of a white supremacist country that is
cracking down on black people, even though statistically speaking, obviously
the vast majority of crime is intraracial, meaning white on
white or black on black. Black on white crime on
a per capita basis is significantly higher than white on
black crime. That does not match up with the media
narrative about white supremacy in the United States.

Speaker 2 (42:33):
So Ben Shapiro talking about this, and look, not all
those things are wrong, but it's the reason that any
kind of conversations going on is because yes, the right,
the magaite, whatever you want to call it, has pushed
this out there and tried to make this about, you know,
black versus white, because it's great for cliques, great for likes,
all of that kind of stuff. And it's frustrating because

(42:56):
nobody's really interested in having a conversation because the average
person doesn't really care unless it affects them. They don't
care like the economy, it affects us all. So we
pay a lot more attention to that. Crime isn't running
rampant in most areas, but there are areas where crime sucks.
There are areas in which crime is more than just

(43:19):
a serious issue. It is a life and death issue
on a daily basis. In certain parts of Chicago fifteen blocks.
We've talked about that, Saint Louis, East, Saint Louis in particular, Memphis.
I mean there are certain places that, yeah, it is.
But the conversation is should I surge the military? Well

(43:42):
that's a good look. It gets everybody riled up. And
to say that there isn't a component to this that
is race, yeah, I think there is. You got a
lot of people out there on the right who are like,
well they did this because of that and she's white,
and yeah, there is. It's a establishment media narrative when

(44:05):
it comes to a lot of these crimes. It's the
same thing with a shooter, right, what's the first thing
that happens? If there's a shooter. We don't care that
thirty five people get shot in Chicago over a weekend,
ten of them at a house party. That's never really
covered outside of the local news. But even today, if

(44:28):
there's a shooter, there's a lockdown, how many people, how
many people are injured, how many death? There's a number
that goes with it, and it sounds horrible, But I'm
peeling back the layers here and letting you see. And
then what's the first thing everybody wants to know? What's
the color of the shooter, what's their politics, what's their gender,
what's their ideology? Is it terrorism? So there is some

(44:54):
of that, let's not pretend there isn't. But the people
that push out all of this stuff and talk about
all all this stuff and they're interested in the clicks
and the likes and all of the kind they're not
interested in finding a solution, having a real conversation, which
is a shame. But I expect nothing less not today's world.
You know what I do expect. We're probably never going
to find out anything about Epstein that I do expect,

(45:17):
and that is frustrating. So yesterday there was there's a book.
So for those you neck giving score, there's now a book,
the one that Trump says doesn't exist, which had the
drawing on it. And it's a bizarre drawing, to say
the least. And it's it's weird. And yes, did Trump

(45:37):
do it? I'm assuming he did. He can go oh,
I never did, never met the guy, et cetera, et cetera.
I don't really buy that.

Speaker 19 (45:43):
Delivered in response to a subpoena to Jeffrey Epstein's estate,
the two thousand and three birthday book contains a typewritten
note that appears to be signed by Donald Trump, as
reported by The Wall Street Journal in July. The letter
is framed by the hand drawn outline of a female figure.
It includes the text happy birthday and may every day
be another wonderful secret. The president has sued the Wall

(46:04):
Street Journal's owner, claiming the paper's report was fake. Now
that the letter has been made public, a top White
House communications aid claims it's not Trump's signature on the note.

Speaker 2 (46:13):
Okay, so they go. So it's not his signature, it's
not his drawing, and he's never drawn anything except for
the part where's drawn a lot of stuff and actually
gave it to charity for people to bid on it
and stuff, and we get it. We get it.

Speaker 8 (46:25):
So you saw that Epstein victims come to Capitol Hill
last week. They called for DOJ to release the documents
that are worthholding from the committee. Now, keep in mind,
these documents that were released yesterday are not at least
in the possession of the Department of Justice. Right, It
wasn't like the government was withholding this letter. Of course,
the government has seen the letter now. But does this

(46:46):
now heighten those calls and put pressure on the administration
to release all those documents.

Speaker 2 (46:52):
No, I don't think they will. They're going to do
everything they can to slow walk this, try to run
out the clock and hopefully be out of office before
anything happens. I find it to be awful. I find
it to be disingenuous. And somebody asked me last night,
why haven't these girls and these women who've had all

(47:16):
these things happen. Why aren't they naming names or aren't
they doing stuff they said they were going to, and
Thomas Massey and Marjorie Taylor Green Bill said the same thing. Look,
you're dealing with beyond powerful men. I mean, we're talking
about move mountain kind of men with moving mountain kind
of money and organizations behind them. So any thought of

(47:44):
them coming out and doing something like this, well they're
going to be litigated to death, bankrupt, and who knows
what else, because that's the kind of power these people
have and potentially agencies. So that's why Thomas Massey and
Marjorie Tayler green said, well, you know, we'll start reading
the names out on the floor because the one thing
our founding fathers did was gave our government large swath

(48:08):
in particular Congress on the floor to not have to
worry about being sued. So they said, we'll take the
slings and arrows on this one. And Massy, as we know,
is already taking those slings and arrows because they're doing
everything they can to get rid of him, which makes
me think, hmm, there's a lot more there, no doubt.
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty

(48:29):
three at Chad Benzi shows your Extra Insta YouTube, Facebook,
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(48:51):
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formulated this. Wanted people to understand that he comes at
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dot com slash chad. This is the Chadbentson Show.

Speaker 1 (49:40):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (49:43):
Trump and Chicago. Trump taking on crime, Trump tough on crime,
Trump likes a show.

Speaker 20 (49:50):
The Chicago Operation launching as president, Trump tells what he
calls a successful crime crackdown in Washington, DC. In making
his case, the President question how crimes sticks are compiled,
questioning why incidents of domestic violence are included.

Speaker 2 (50:04):
If a man has a little fight with the wife,
they say this was a crime. See so now I
can't claim one hundred percent His.

Speaker 20 (50:10):
Remark little fight with a wife, drawing backlash critics claiming
the president is downplaying domestic violence.

Speaker 2 (50:17):
Okay, well, it's not always good with the explanation of things.
I don't think he's downplaying well, I'd like to think
he's not downplaying domestic violence. That being said, again, with
all the things going on, it's not a good look.
But you had they're cracking down. There's nobody being killed,
there's no crime. They're resting people left right center. All
these convictions they're going to get.

Speaker 21 (50:37):
Wow, judge see a Paraquey just uncorked a twenty minute
raised voice stem Winer against the Department of Justice, refusing
the FEDS in the administration of creating a constitutional crisis.
It went on, so long and so powerfully. He concluded
by saying, it's September fourth. As of now, we still
have a constitutional democracy.

Speaker 2 (50:57):
Here's what happened.

Speaker 21 (50:58):
Thirty minutes beforeminary hearing for a man named Edward Dana
announced they were dismissing the felony charge against Edward Dana,
the latest in a series of federal cases they have
sought to dismiss amid this Trump DC clampdown. In all
the recent arrests, Dana was accused of breaking a light fixture,
of being drunk, of allegedly claiming that he was part

(51:19):
of the Russian mafia, that he wanted to fight fascism
even if it meant killing a president. Those are the accusations.
The Fed's brought a felony charge of threats against the president.
Defense attorney said, even a fifteen year old. But no,
that's not a felony threat against president type case. But
Dana was locked up for a week.

Speaker 2 (51:36):
So he's locked up for a week. They threw the
case out. Many of these cases, and I'm talking in
vast majority of them, they're going no, no, we're not
going to do that. The show is the thing that
should piss us all off. It's never in politics. It's
never about actually finding solutions anymore. It's about making sure

(51:58):
there's a good show for the people. Right Like this
is Rome hundreds of days of games and entertainment with
little to show for. It is what I feel like,
what's happening here? Three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four,
twenty three at Chad Benton Shows your acts, install YouTube,
Facebook and more. If you miss any show makes you're good.
The podcast right on the Chad Benson Show. And I

(52:21):
mean that I'm not trying to say that, like we
we shouldn't have conversations about crime, because we should, but
it's so much about the likes, the clicks, the the
you know, it's no longer about the get everybody into
the coliseum and we'll have the games and well, what's
the gladiators fight. We'll do all that kind of stuff.
That stuff's already going on. But this is about the

(52:44):
show we're going to show up and this right now
in Chicago, this is all pissing contest between Pritzker and Trump.
It's what it is. Yeah, there are fifteen neighborhoods in
Chicago that are not good. We've talked about that. Bringing
in the National Guard to guard stuff far away, right,
because this federal property is what they're allowed to guard.

Speaker 16 (53:07):
Is not.

Speaker 2 (53:09):
Going to fix the problem. And what happens when you leave.
You can't keep them there forever. I mean maybe Trump
might think about keeping you just can't. And much like
I would saying this with the Taliban, we fought twenty
years against the Taliban and several other groups and we

(53:30):
left and after deposing the Taliban, we turned it over
to the Taliban. The minute everybody leaves and the show
clears out, guess what comes back the same problem. If
you're missing the show, grab the podcast. This is the
Chad Benson Show, Sun Chad.

Speaker 1 (54:10):
Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (54:32):
You know one thing that's not being talked about. We
talked about it here when others won't because you know what,
we'll go there. And I'm not talking about Venezuela. I'm
talking about three I Atlas giant comment that's coming here
or whatever it is. And I love it when they
talk to all the physicists and everything, they're like, it's
a comment, right, They're like, maybe, yeah, it could be,

(54:54):
it's possible. Are you are you? Are you saying it
might not be Yeah, okay, yeah, that sounds good too.
Why does it have other little comments? Yeah, that's that's
a good that's a that's a good question. There, you're
asking the right question. So this is perplexing a lot

(55:15):
of people because it's not moving the way that a
comet would move and if you're paying no attention to it.
This thing is this is a real thing. It's an
interstellar comment thing, yes, or spaceship maybe. One astrophysicist professor

(55:35):
Northeastern University Jacqueline McCleary said, interstellar objects, which all seem
to be comments, are only things that we've ever gotten
physical observations for within our solar system that originated outside
of our solar system. So this is sort of like
a message of meaning. She don't know either, That's what

(55:59):
she says. What do I think? I don't know, But
what I do know is today on the hill, Bulina, Luna,
Tim Burchett and a few others are going to have
a hearing about UAPs and some of the incidents that
have not been reported, some of the things they have
been privy to. So this will be interesting as well.

(56:21):
You never know what it could be. I'm just putting
it out there. We cover it when others don't. That's
who we are here at the Jad Benson Show. Meanwhile,
speaking of stuff that you thought would never happen, it's
been a while for this family. This is one of
those things where you wonder why there's a gender reveal
for stuff like this.

Speaker 1 (56:41):
A historic moment in the Sherman family line.

Speaker 22 (56:44):
Surrounded by family from all generations, Montgomery County firefighter Michael
Sherman and his wife Jaquia Sherman found out they're expecting
a baby girl. Their daughter will be the first girl
born into the Sherman family in one hundred and eighty years.
This newest edition ready to be welcomed by the couple
along with their five year old son, Mackai.

Speaker 2 (57:07):
That is a long time, one hundred and eight years
there has been no girls born in this family one hundred.
Do you think that little girl is going to be spoiled?

Speaker 8 (57:20):
We have like three bags some clothes already, closet for
of dresses.

Speaker 2 (57:25):
Yeah, I think spoiled. You ever seen those people, that
young couple in their mid twenties, maybe even early thirties,
and there's both sets of grandparents just rally around the baby.
Baby gets whatever they want. This is going to be
that Time's a gazillion monumental thing. I have three boys.

Speaker 1 (57:42):
My dad had two boys, his brother had two boys.

Speaker 2 (57:45):
So there's been nothing but boys, boys, boys, one hundred
and eight years of boys, boys boys. Not anymore. Now
it's going to be a girl. Think she's going to
be protected. You messing with our cousin because we don't
want to have to bury you. Yeah, she's special, she
is spacial. This I had to bring up because we're
trying to jam through a lot of stories that sometimes
we just don't get to because there's so much stuff

(58:06):
going on. I wanted to talk about this yesterday and
I didn't. A dude in Arigan, looking at you York, decided, Hey,
I'm gonna live here in this condo. By condo, I
mean this scrawl space.

Speaker 7 (58:21):
He even had his own power supply that was being
run to the house, and deputy say they also found
meth down there.

Speaker 4 (58:30):
Impressive. Impressive, like some kind of like a like a
zombie flake or something like that.

Speaker 7 (58:34):
When you visit this happy valley neighborhood, tucked away off
a busy street, it's typically quiet, but on Friday there's
lots to talk about here. As multiple neighbors tell me
they were shocked to learn what was happening just down
the road.

Speaker 5 (58:51):
I think that's just like a freak show, Like that's
just not something that happens every day.

Speaker 7 (58:56):
These pictures tell the story showing a forty year old's
living space, complete with the TV and electronics, all in
someone's crawl space without their knowledge.

Speaker 2 (59:09):
I love the guys, like, that's pretty impressive. He was
honest about it. It's like, I pretty ingenious, right. You
think with all the stuff that you figured out how
to do cable, you havet video games, some meth that
maybe you get a regular job, get a regular apartment,
But no, this works I guess for you. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (59:27):
I was kind of laugh when they said you gotta
be a S five.

Speaker 22 (59:33):
My wow, he's really living in good down there.

Speaker 7 (59:36):
Ketzy Ludwig and her husband are the ones that made
the discovery and called police, thinking something wasn't right when
they saw a man walk into the back of their
building who they never seen before.

Speaker 8 (59:49):
I cannot believe it.

Speaker 2 (59:50):
That really weird.

Speaker 1 (59:51):
I feel like I only see those movies.

Speaker 7 (59:54):
Neighbors say they saw a man park right here in
this parking lot before walking down this hill and.

Speaker 23 (59:59):
Towards the back of these condos here on my left.

Speaker 7 (01:00:02):
They say that's when they saw him go inside the
crawl space, and when they saw a light on, that's
when they knew something was wrong.

Speaker 6 (01:00:08):
But I never picture that they I mean, I never
imagined that they will be literally outside under my house.

Speaker 2 (01:00:15):
And it was a trip. I mean, he had everything
in there. You hear stories about this and wackadoos that
do some of this stuff. Some of them are really wacked.
If some people are just they don't want to pay
for stuff, and they thought, well, I'll just kind of
live here and a fringe society. Nobody's ever going to

(01:00:37):
notice me, and I could live up here quietly eventually
because people are like, well there's lights on, that's kind
of an odd thing it's going on, and your party
up there, and I would park the car and he'd
walk around the back and then he'd go.

Speaker 7 (01:00:51):
Ludwood tells me this could have been her showing me
this picture of their crawl space with damage to the doorframe,
as if someone was trying to pry open.

Speaker 22 (01:01:02):
Looking for a place to.

Speaker 7 (01:01:04):
Live now, Benjamin Buber was taken to jail here in
Clackamus County and is being held on a seventy five
thousand dollars bond.

Speaker 2 (01:01:13):
That's quite a bond. I just love the guy at
the beginning. That's that's pretty impressive. Actually they do something
like that. Crazy is everywhere people, as we talked about
earlier today, and it's just have to wonder how somebody
gets to that point, don't you Like? How do you
get to that point where you are thinking, I'm going

(01:01:40):
to live in somebody's crawl space. I'm going to try
to get into somebody's crawl space. How do you do that?
That's so bizarre, it really is. And to think that
is that? Is that normal? Is that a normal thing?
I mean, I know it's expensive out there, but is
that normal? We had our buddy calls all the time
about Daniel, about what's going on up there in Oregon

(01:02:03):
in particular. And you guys can always leave a message
three two three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three,
and you can tweet at me at Chad Benson Show,
and when you call the text line, you can leave
a message as well. And he always calls up there
about you know, the expense of life and whatnot, and
you know, illegals have everything, and these people coming here
and they're getting stuff and you know, they're driving for
Uber and they're driving for for you know, the all

(01:02:27):
of the delivery for food, and it's not fair and
and and it is expensive out there. There's no doubt
about that. It's no doubt it was so expensive that
guy lived in a crawl space. Don't give people an
idea where, you know, especially in a place like Portland's like,
you know, we could do that. We can just take
people's homes away and just subdivide him into little intimitty places.

(01:02:49):
I saw a guy the other day that said something
that was terrifying about AI. And I'm a big proponent
of AI, as you guys know. That being said, I
also understand the dangers of AI and what may be.
But this guy, who is what he does for a living.

(01:03:10):
I'll see if I can find the article and some
of the audio from it. But he talked about, let's
flash forward, you know, maybe a decade and all of
a sudden, robots AI does everything. What then universal basic income?
We don't have any we'll just run out, So what then?

(01:03:34):
And he said, I could foresee a day where everybody
lives in like a box. They have a headset and
he's been twenty three hours a day in there, living
out your best life, your best fantasy, your best world,
and you never know anything other than that. Then you

(01:03:58):
come out and then you go back in and you
go into another world. And I thought, oh my god,
that's insane. Yeah, no, no, we don't want that. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four twenty three at 'd Benson shows
your ex your Insta, YouTube, Facebook coming up, a little
urban word of the Day, among other things, plus our

(01:04:18):
question of the day about organs, not the States, not
the musical instrument, but your organs. Should you be able
to sell them? Webroot speaking of the interwebs man, you
got to protect yourself. I tell you guys this because
I know from experience of you know, TransUnion, there was

(01:04:40):
a big deal there. You had Webroot. They're there to
protect you. I got to offer a couple of weeks ago,
about a month or so ago from Equifax, something that happened,
you know, several years ago. You need to protect yourself people.
I'm telling you this over and over again. Webroot has

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plans that will protect you and your family from people
who want to pray on you. The online predators are everywhere,
your data hacks all of that stuff. They got a
great VPN, they have got incredible dark web, advanced monitoring
which you need, credit and financial monitoring with alerts which
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(01:05:22):
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a better digital life with Webroot. Chad Benson show.

Speaker 14 (01:06:14):
A hashtag me too, hashtag immigration reforms, hashtag help.

Speaker 1 (01:06:18):
I'm trapped in a hashtag factory and I can't get
out the chat Benson show.

Speaker 2 (01:06:26):
This portion of the program where we help you guys
understand what the youth of America are saying, because they're
saying a lot of things. The words they kind of
sound the same, but they don't mean the same. Yes, kids,
we help you here. That's what we do. You guys know.
I love doing this so and it's funny because I
have kids that say stuff and I'm like, I have
what what are you talking about? First of all, no,

(01:06:49):
first of all, that doesn't mean what you think it means.
But then I'm like, Okay, they're using words right that
we used to use, but we use them in the
correct way. It's like today you can say they and
that means a singular. Okay, you're changing the rules, but whatever.
But they've got their own vernacular. We want to make
sure that you understand that because we're dealing with them

(01:07:09):
on a daily basis. They're out there kids. It is time. Now,
it's time for the urban word of the day. The
young have a vocabulary all their own, and we break
it down for you. It's called the urban word of
the day. All right, your urban word today? Hem? They're like,

(01:07:34):
what heem? It's a better version of something. Look, I
don't make it up. Okay, this is what the kids
are saying. Keem. So you look over there and a
girl will go, oh, that boy, he's heeme. Apparently that

(01:07:55):
means it's hot, he's all that, and then some like
if your boyfriend's an a, he's a ten. Keem is
a better version of something. There you go, kid to
learn something new. That was the urban word of the day.
Now you know, now you know, and the more you know,
the better it is. Speaking of knowing, I asked a

(01:08:17):
question earlier. You guys go to the magical world of acts.
Play along with me. And I'm not trying to be
ghoulish or weird. Okay, I want to get that out there.
Not being ghoulish or weird. I'm being honest about should
you be able to sell your organs? Ooh okay, so

(01:08:42):
should you be able to sell an organ? Should you
be able to you know, whatever you want to call it,
because we have a massive shortage and they're doing stuff,
you know, like pig stuff.

Speaker 23 (01:08:54):
Bill Stewart received a new kidney June fourteenth. It was
not a human kidney, but a genetic engineered pig kidney.

Speaker 4 (01:09:01):
I've always been a little bit of a science nerd.

Speaker 23 (01:09:03):
The New Hampshire man's no longer on dialysis since says
a recent ultrasound show of positive results.

Speaker 1 (01:09:09):
Doctorella said, my kidt he's doing absolutely wonderfully.

Speaker 2 (01:09:12):
It looks great.

Speaker 23 (01:09:12):
Doctor Leonardo Riella and Mass General says this can save lives.

Speaker 5 (01:09:17):
We know the best treatment for these patients, but we
are stuck because of the organ shortage.

Speaker 23 (01:09:22):
Political trials are beginning.

Speaker 2 (01:09:24):
So I asked the question, should we be able to,
as individuals adults, Okay, not forcing people into something, but
should you be able to, as a person who is
in their right mind, who is healthy, understanding the risk

(01:09:48):
with their own body, say to somebody who needs a
kidney right, like his dialysis is a nightmare. Ask anybody
if you know somebody's been through dialysis. It's a nightmare. Kidneys.
It is such a nightmare for people who have to
be in those places. The quality of life sucks. Or

(01:10:09):
deliver right, and the liver is one of those things
where you're going to take deliver well, it grows back,
so you're gonna take the whole thing. And yes, the
liver does grow and regenerates, so it's kind of like
an axe. A lot up. But it's in your body.
I mean, this is one and I'm not trying to
be some ghoulish person. That's actually one of the two choices. No,
that's googlis and the other ones ysked you should So
far most people are to go no, you shouldn't. But

(01:10:31):
if somebody comes to you and you're in your mid thirties,
you got one hundred and fifty two hundred thousand dollars
in debt, you're trying to get your life rolling, you're
in good health, and somebody offers you the opportunity to
not only help another human being, but to help yourself,

(01:10:54):
wouldn't you want that? And we're going to come up with, well,
it's wrong, or you shouldn't be able to do that,
or the rich are gonna get these kind of things.
So it's your body, though, I mean you would be
benefiting too, So I mean, I just to me, it's
an interesting question. I mean, at some point in time,

(01:11:17):
we're going to grow bodies inside of a test tube
and we'll have organs on demand, and that's gonna be
weird because we're gonna have this body there with either
no head or no brain, and it's just gonna be
you know, like it's like going to a supermarket and

(01:11:37):
I'll take one of those and you know, I need
a kidney on there, or I need a liver, and
that's the way it's going to be. But I just
thought this was a fair and interesting question at a
time like this. Let me know what you think. Three
two three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three at
Chad Benson Show. That is your ex your Insta, YouTube, Facebook,

(01:11:57):
and more. We're gonna be live on the YouTube tonight
if you have a chance to check us out. If
you miss any of the show, gread the podcast right
here on the Chad Benson Show. Coming up, our number
three of the program, Buddy Michaelin's going to join the
program and talk about your cream. Were talking about Israel,
gods that what's going on there and Venezuela talk of that.

(01:12:18):
We've got your what's trending as well. Epstein Man. There's
so much stuff we still have to get to, so
make sure you stick around for that. And if you
miss it, shame, I mean, that's all you're gonna get
is a bunch of shame from us. Jame Jamee three
two three five three twenty four to twenty three at
Chad Benson Show. It's your ex Insta, Facebook and YouTube

(01:12:38):
will be live like I said tonight on the old YouTube,
Insta and Facebook. Just make sure you join the program.
Our number three straight ahead, Chad bensa chet.

Speaker 1 (01:12:51):
This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:13:21):
It's about the economy. So last week numbers work great.
So I'm sure Trump fired everybody there. It's not very nice, Chad,
but maybe and then of course the revision, we actually
lost jobs, which is not good at all. That being said,
how do people feel?

Speaker 24 (01:13:37):
The National Federation of Independent Business isn't engaging the sentiment
of its members since nineteen seventy three. At its Small
Business Optimism Index rose half a point last month. It's
above its fifty two year average. The survey found improvement
in overall business health, but nagging concern about labor quality.

Speaker 2 (01:13:57):
Yeah, labor quality. That's a big deal, no doubt about that.
But most of them, it's over fifty percent feel good.

Speaker 24 (01:14:05):
Fourteen percent of owners characterized it as excellent to more
than half said the health of their companies was good.

Speaker 2 (01:14:12):
So they're feeling good right like raw, it's all good.
It's all good. We're feeling good, feeling good, got the
good going on, the good feeling, which is good to hear.
Struggle though, when it comes to the worry about labor,
I understand that I do. So you got all this

(01:14:33):
stuff happening. It's always about the economy. It's always going
to be about the economy, because the one thing that
we all participate in is the economy, and that's that's
a constant. That's a constant. So you may have an
issue today with your car got broken into, you pissed,

(01:14:55):
your angry crime, Ah, you fix it, that doesn't happen,
and again, hopefully ever that was a moment, but you're
still dealing with the economy, which is also part of that.
I mean, the all of these things all revolve around
the economy. So people are asking questions, well, if the

(01:15:18):
economy's so good, why the rise of Zoron Mundani. Because
Zoron Mandanmi is giving a younger generation of voters who
felt like they did everything correct and they look up
and now they're broke af as the kids would say,

(01:15:39):
they're struggling in every way, shape or form that you
can think of. They've came out of school, I've been
telling everybody this. I think we need to get rid
of diplomas and just shout out how much money you owe.
Right here comes Robs Stevens one hundred and forty two

(01:15:59):
thousand dollars that will follow him around forever. They're angry,
they're frustrated. They're looking at a life that you know,
isn't anywhere near what they thought they were going to get.
That's why you see the rise of things like socialism
and communism, because what they're looking at is a system

(01:16:24):
that doesn't work for them. It doesn't which brings us
to the latest gallop pole. And do you know what
that says? What's it say, Chad? I'm glad you asked.
Image of capitalism slips to fifty four percent in the USA.
Perceptions of socialism remains right around thirty nine percent. They're

(01:16:50):
looking at people getting wealthy, they're looking at people living
the dream. And when I brought this up yesterday in
my local show, a lot of people who are older
he said, you know, I did it on myself and
back in the day. Well, let me tell you something
about back in the day. Okay, So just to give
a breakdown before we go hard at the youth of

(01:17:12):
America as we tend to do. Let's go say nineteen
ninety to today, price versus then and now buying a home,
those those those marks, we always talk about those milestones.
So the US median price of a home back in

(01:17:33):
nineteen ninety one hundred and twenty six thousand, today four
hundred and ten, three x higher in dollars. Okay, So
even if you adjust for inflation, real home values sit
well above nineties level. Thirty year rates back then when
you're borrowing ten percent right, last year was near seven

(01:17:55):
lower than the late eighties and nineties, but not low
enough to offset the prices. So real median household income
in today's world about eighty grand by itself, comparable to
recent years, but it hasn't kept up with the surge
of home prices. So affordability back then was way way better.

(01:18:21):
The dollar went way way further. It is a much
different world. That's why when you hear somebody like Mandani
come out there and nobody's like, what are you gonna
do with him? Oh my god, I should bught him
up to me, and everybody else is like, well, not
quite sure. Not only is he young, which does help

(01:18:42):
because you're dealing with a Democrat party in particular that
is long in the tooth. You're also looking at somebody
who understands what so many of these people that he's
reaching in their twenties thirties and are going through, which
is they can't get to the milestones they used to

(01:19:04):
get to that they saw their parents get to because
life is priced too far away from them even if
they do. Okay, I saw yesterday the American Dream now
is about five million dollars. That's that's a little bit
more expensive. That seems like an American lottery win for

(01:19:24):
a lot of people. And the people that I know
that bought houses when I was younger, even in the
early two thousands, Mom and Dad loan the money for
the most part to put that down. They could afford
the payment, but they could they were never gonna be
able to afford the down. And that was a huge

(01:19:45):
helper right there. And and in today's world, a lot
of people can afford that payment. They're never going to
get that down. They're never gonna get that So the
other side of it affording houses, people made sacrifices. It's

(01:20:05):
like I can afford this house. It's a nine day
ride into work. What I work with a couple in myself,
but I work with a couple in California. They would
come up Monday morning and stay Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday

(01:20:27):
in a hotel because the house that could afford was
like one hundred miles away. For what they wanted, they did,
they made great money. Their life was good. So but
for me, I remember, you guys have listened to me
talk about the Valley of the Dirt people. And I
would drive sixty miles sixty sixty five miles into work

(01:20:48):
every day and back and it was an ass kicker.
Now we could have moved closer, yes, but we had
a nice house, we had a nice lifestyle. The kids
were happy there, and you know it was It's insane,
it is. It is absolutely insane. That's why Mondani is

(01:21:11):
getting so many people around them. When you've got capitalism
right now in the latest Gallup poll sitting at fifty
four percent, and we don't have capitalism. I want to
remind everybody we think we have capitalists, we don't. We
have a corporatist version of capitalism. It's not the free

(01:21:32):
market that you would want it to be. You've got
large corporations courting power. You've got power courting large corporations.
So you've got big lobbyists, big groups with special interest

(01:21:53):
courting all of these people who are for sale to
help them get re elected and doing so they will
get some luve. So that's the frustration. So this think
of you know what people say, capitalist is bad. No
capitalism and free market is great. We don't have that
through overregulation, through the fact that not only we overregulated stuff,

(01:22:20):
because regulation is good, but overregulation is ridiculous. But through
overregulation and the fact that some people think, well what
about big business. They like regulation because it's a win
for them. The more regulation they're already set up, the
harder it is, the more hurdles it is for a
smaller company to get in to do what to compete.

(01:22:45):
There's a reason that the young are looking elsewhere. And
I don't blame them for it. I don't you had
somebody come in saying we're going to tax the wealthy,
who are getting more wealthy every single second. You've got
Trump who said, oh, I'm gonna you know, I'm here

(01:23:05):
for the little guy. And what has he done. He's
added tariffs, he's made things more expensive, people are frustrated
at it. I'm not saying it's not going to work,
because it may work in the long term, but the
reality is he's looking. People are looking around, going, so
you've got all these huge tech people there. Everybody's getting richerr.
Kids have made gobs of cash, which you have as

(01:23:25):
well with your coins. I mean, everybody else is looking, going,
I thought this was going to be different. It's not to.
It's the same side of the coin heads eye win, tails,
you lose, and that's the game they're playing. And it
is frustrating. And there's a reason. And if business doesn't

(01:23:49):
get their head out their butts, you're going to see
huge changes in this country coming big changes. And Mandani
isn't the only one who's talking like this, and he's
changing his tune a little bit. He understands this stuff
isn't going to work the way that he would want
it to. But there is a reason for this. People

(01:24:12):
are looking at the capitalist system we have built that
was great, that brought all of the world here, and
a younger group of people, voters in particular, going yeah,
this isn't free market. This is cronyism at its finest.
Three two three five, three eight, twenty four to twenty

(01:24:33):
three acts had Benson Show is your ex Insta, YouTube, Facebook,
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eight for Birch Gold at Chad Benson Show. Your X
that's your Insta, your YouTube, your Facebook and more. We're
going to be live tonight on the old YouTube. If
you have a chance to join us. Our buddy Mike
Line is going to join the program a little bit,
talk about Ukraine, talk about Israel, and talk about something
that should be talked about more. What the hell is

(01:26:00):
going on with us and Venezuela. We'll do that coming
up a little bit straight ahead. What's trending Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:26:17):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:26:19):
Now it's time to find out what's trending. What's trending?
Signed James.

Speaker 18 (01:26:32):
Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Sernam.

Speaker 2 (01:26:43):
What trappings fan I was trending? On this Tuesday we'll
start to Magic World. Who Lamar Jackson? So he pushes
a fan after a fan did something to him or
a there was kerfuffle. He said, the emotions got the

(01:27:05):
best of them. After loss the other night, fans been
banned from all Buffalo Bill's game and that's pretty much
it for him in his life, because there's not a
lot going on in Buffalo. It's not very nice, uh
Trump his letter to Epstein, it's not me. Wasn't me?
Never you've met the guy to you know if he existed.
Chicago Bears once again snatched defeat from the Joseph victory

(01:27:30):
last night another I fell asleep again, so I told
my wife fast, game's over. I mean, Minnesota can't move
the ball. They're horrible. I'm gonna go to bed. I
gotta get up early. I'll be damned. NFL. If you
guys want things to go well for you an your
late night games, make sure I go to betterly. And
of course the Karen from the Phillies game still trending

(01:27:53):
over to Google. Google at the Google Bears, French government
eastcops again, it's weaken the Geelong was anyone including our
sales Supreme Court Nepaul. Big things going on in Nepaul.
If you're paying no attention because you probably aren't. You're like,
what the hell is Nepaul? Isn't that ice cream? Oh
that's Neapolitan.

Speaker 23 (01:28:12):
No to Paul.

Speaker 2 (01:28:13):
It's a country. The youth are rioting because of nepotism, corruption,
and they tried to ban like twenty six social media
apps and finally overdue. X Trump denies knowing Epstein in
the birthday card. You know, I've never heard of it.

(01:28:33):
Bernie Sanders, Jaco Tuesday, Bill Clinton, Oh Man, I wrote
him a letter. That's what I do. I'm a last
person Ukraine. All thanks trending the Magic World of X
three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three
as Chet Benson shows your X YouTube, Facebook and more.
If you missing the show, Gred the podcast on the

(01:28:54):
Chat Benson Show. The letter thing is funny. We've talked
about it throughout the day. Never seen it before. It's
not mine, da da d whatever. You wrote a letter
to a guy. You guys were all creepers. We get
it right. You liked women. You're just wealthy white dudes
running around having a good time. And one of those

(01:29:16):
guys happened to be the worst peedo that we potentially
have seen as a singular person. Not as an organization,
not a church of the boy Scouts book in I
don't know when this is how bad this guy is
and he praying helping, Oh please let it go. It
isn't It's not going anywhere. It's not it's not going anywhere.

(01:29:41):
So last night I did a video about the Karen,
the baseball Karen, and now there's other videos of her
yelling at other people during the game as well. She's
not helping herself. But I still don't think we should
destroy her life. That was one of the big things
I made. It's like, well, there's no reason to destroyed
this woman's life. She woke up and the world hated her.
I think that's kind of enough. If I'm her, I'm

(01:30:02):
dying my hair, shaving my head, get in contacts, something else.
Throw off the Santa who who you could be? Maybe
root for another team? Three two, three, five, twenty four,
twenty three at Chad Benson Shows, Your Act Your Insta
coming up next to our buddy, my client's military analyst
joints the program Chad Benson.

Speaker 1 (01:30:20):
Show, Son Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:31:08):
At the time of the week, we talked to the
best damn military handleists in the business Mike Leines, retired
major in the Army and military analysts for US and others,
but mostly just for US. Let's start first and foremost
man Ukraine. The hits are getting bigger. Russia doesn't seem
to be going anywhere back and down, and they're indiscriminately

(01:31:29):
just throwing everything they can everywhere. This is going to
get way uglier for the next several weeks, isn't it.

Speaker 13 (01:31:35):
Yeah, Chad, you know said last week, you know, you know,
Russia just launched the largest drone and missile strikeing against Ukraine,
while you know, this morning we say the same thing.
They just launched the largest one bigger than the one
last that was last week. These strikes continue, They're on
government sites, they're starting to hit Kiev. I don't you
know the president is you know, I thought he would

(01:31:58):
have been doing something by now. And what he's planning
on doing won't stick. These economic sanctions won't make them stop.
I mean, we've talked about the leverage has never been
there for Russia to stop. The European nation thought, the
European Union thought that that what is going to take place,
and there's going to be some progress there just doesn't
look like it's going to happen.

Speaker 4 (01:32:18):
And so on the other side.

Speaker 13 (01:32:19):
Weapons have to pour in, air defense platforms need to
pour in. We have to let Ukraine go deep strike.
Now they are hitting some of their industrial capability that
Ukraine is and you're seeing that, but it's just still
Mother Russia. I mean, they're just not there's still not
enough leverage on them to stop fighting at this point.

Speaker 2 (01:32:38):
Now you said let them go deep do we have
to get to the point where we say, all right,
look here's sadal what we are hoping for, which is
you know, the pressure on you know, India and a
bunch of other people that would stop them buying oil.
Their machine couldn't get funded and they would come to
the table. That isn't working. So you guys, outside of
hitting Moscow, feel free to do whatever the hell you

(01:32:59):
need to do to to do something to try to
shake the cobwebs out of his ears and get him
to come to the table and listen to what people
have to say.

Speaker 13 (01:33:08):
Well, you know, you look at the history of warfare
and at some point you have this, you know, civilian
military bleedover where while targets are clearly designed for military
that civilians are impacted more. Look what's going on in Israel,
for example, how Israel's trying to thread that needle there,
but there's clearly civilian casualties taking place. I don't think

(01:33:30):
that's happening at all. Inside of Russia. For a lot
of different reasons. They're concerned about targeting civilian places where
there's build up factories, for example, those are potentially should
be military targets.

Speaker 4 (01:33:43):
I don't think Ukraine has done that.

Speaker 13 (01:33:45):
And so again, look at the history of warfare, and
there's some internal pressures sometimes that's put on those countries
in order to decide to come to the table. That
hasn't taken place here in Russia at all. And so
maybe that's where it's got to be. But because you're
seeing Russia just that they're targeting civilian government offices that
are fundamentally defenseless. The fact that they've got to bring

(01:34:06):
air defense systems back now to Kiev in order to
defend those cities and defend that cities means that the
troops on the front lines are now much more exposed.
And so there's just no not a good situation, I
a good solution for the current tactical situation inside Ukraine.

Speaker 2 (01:34:23):
Talking to Mike Clon's military analysts, we talk about all
the stuff going on globally when it comes to war,
and there's plenty of it. You know, I feel like
Europe and US have put these parameters on Hey, Ukraine,
you can defend, but we really don't want you attacking
because he's got nukes and we don't want this thing

(01:34:44):
to you know, spill out into something insane. And I
feel like they're fighting in this kind of this little
box here comparatively to like you said. I mean, Botin
doesn't care about civilians. He'll bomb buildings, he just doesn't
care about that. And do they have to have those
kind of you know, shackles taken off and allow them

(01:35:04):
to kind of do that so maybe they start to
feel it back at home with civilian deaths.

Speaker 4 (01:35:10):
Yeah, I think that's exactly right.

Speaker 13 (01:35:11):
I think that there has to be some internal pressure
inside of Russia if Ukraine decides to go after factories
and go after places where there'll be civilian casualties that
are still you know, we can we can cavel about
whether they're military targets or not, but they have to
do that I think that that will push potentially Russia
to start to think twice. But it's going to take

(01:35:33):
a lot of range. It's going to take more different
kinds of missile systems. Look Russia's eleven time zones. They
have people in all different places. They have this advantage
of moving their logistical supply chains well outside of what
was formerly the range of Ukraine capability in particular artillery.
But we can continue to give them weapons that can

(01:35:54):
continue to reach that if we choose to do that.
We haven't also, you know the logistics of getting them
there now with six to eight months, there's there's no
question that we need to ramp up our militarization and
some of our stockpiles.

Speaker 4 (01:36:08):
I'm reading reports of US.

Speaker 13 (01:36:11):
Expending almost twenty five thirty percent of our air defense
systems that that would be used to defend US in
other countries there. So, again, at some point there'll be
a tipping point with all sides where the President will recognize,
understand it's going to take more than just what he's
doing right now to get Russia to stop.

Speaker 2 (01:36:27):
What's up's role in this? What more can they do?
Because it seems like we're pushing them to do more.
They're trying to do a little bit more. But what
more can they do, you know, because yeah, they've got
their military side of stuff, the hardware they can give them,
but what else are they going to be able to do?

Speaker 13 (01:36:43):
So right now their commitment is really only troops when
Russia agrees to allowing a security for US. But that's
that's the long poll in the tent. They won't allow
that at this point. So the fact that European Europe
has done that is good. I think, you know, the
German Anstelo has already come out and said this war
is going to go on for a long time.

Speaker 4 (01:37:03):
Uh, And so it's uh, you know, there's those.

Speaker 13 (01:37:06):
Economies still remain to be you know, challenged to support
from a military aspect.

Speaker 4 (01:37:12):
I mean, look what's going on in the UK right now.

Speaker 13 (01:37:14):
There they have their own they have their own internal problems,
specifically with the immigrants, you.

Speaker 4 (01:37:19):
Know, that's the other thing.

Speaker 13 (01:37:21):
And look at Poland and look at some of the
countries there. Europe military issues also have this refugee issue,
and it's refugee politics that are tied to what they're
doing militarily. Because because of the refugee problem the past
four years that's taking place in the immigration from from
Syria and these Middle Eastern countries and to Europe. A

(01:37:43):
lot of that money that could have went to defense
has now gone to those social programs. And I think that,
you know, Russia, Poland has done a very good job
of weathering that storm, but some of these other European
countries have not. And I think that's uh, you know,
refugee politics are now going to come to play with
regard to these European nations supporting what's going on in Ukraine.

Speaker 2 (01:38:04):
Talking to Mike Lions military analysts, as we talk about
all things, when it comes to the military globally, there's
a lot of conflicts that either are brewing, seemed to
be brewing, or about ready hopefully to end. What did
you make last week of the big coming together of
China Russia? MODI was there, You had the little fat guy,
the rocket guy, Kim Jong un. What did you make

(01:38:24):
of that? And what'd you make of the parade? Because
I will say this, our fighters, our fighters were not
great marchers. China's marchers are pretty pretty marchy.

Speaker 13 (01:38:34):
Yeah, that's a good point, you know, for sure, it
projects from their perspective what they perceived to be great power.
I don't think it's funny. I don't think the Indians
showed up for that parade. They were smart enough to
recognize that that wouldn't be a good picture to take.
You had mody involved in the backside of that coalition
of the Unwilling and whatever they're calling it these days.
But that Victory Day parade I think was more ambition

(01:38:57):
than it was anything else. You know, those parades were
held in the Soviet Union in the past, and in
some cases they were just built up weapons systems. They
were they weren't even actually that you know, there was
nothing behind them. The three major nations, right you know, Russia, North.

Speaker 4 (01:39:13):
Korea, China.

Speaker 13 (01:39:14):
I mean, they don't they don't even speak the same language.
I'm not even not worried about a military perspective, because
they couldn't even get on the same radios, you know,
they couldn't they couldn't actually put a military together and
do anything. I really believe that it's Beijing trying to
project more power over Russia, which at some point will fracture.
I mean, these are adversaries that have been adversaries in

(01:39:34):
the DNA for hundreds of years, it's not. It's not
that all of a sudden they're going to get together
to try to dominate the rest of the world when
they recognize that just can't happen.

Speaker 4 (01:39:44):
President Trump feels that this is all about economics, and
they couldn't. China needs us.

Speaker 13 (01:39:48):
Maybe so maybe the three thousand walmarts throughout the United
States and all the stuff that we continue to import
from China is all part of that their economy.

Speaker 4 (01:39:57):
But we just have to see.

Speaker 2 (01:39:59):
Sorry to my clients military analysts, we talk about all
things when it comes. We've talked about the Ukraine. Now
let's move over Venezuela. We touched on the last week.
Now a lot of people are talking about it, starting
to get news now that we've blown up allegedly a
you know, a drug you know boat or whatever it was,
you know, trying to get here. We don't move ships
the way we've moved them, and we don't move troops

(01:40:21):
the way we've moved them without some worry about something
that may happen, and nobody's really paying that much attention
to it.

Speaker 13 (01:40:27):
Yeah, great point, And I'm a little bit concerned about this.
And it's almost you know, you saw also the Secretary
of Defense or whatever he's called himself today, is now
pushing for this new strategy that shifts attention away from
China and Russia to defending the homeland western the Western hemisphere.
I saw a paper come out and I'm just shaking
my head. Is this kind of like some kind of

(01:40:49):
play with regard to you know, just projecting power in
you know, in South America? But it just doesn't make
any sense. I mean, when he's the military to go
after the drug cartels is another one of these crazy
missions that you know, we could try to cut off
boats and blow them up as we saw on the
sea there, but we're going to take marines and invade Venezuela.

Speaker 4 (01:41:08):
I don't get it. I don't know where this is
kind of going.

Speaker 13 (01:41:10):
I'm not sure this is this threat that's doesn't really
make sense that the military uses is being used in
that mission. But no, for sure, this mission is being
intensified there, putting a lot of pressure on the Navy.

Speaker 4 (01:41:21):
The Navy does not need this this mission. They need
to focus in the Pacific.

Speaker 13 (01:41:26):
They need to project the power gunboat diplomacy in that
direction towards China and protect our allies out there. But
for whatever reason, they've decided to take those the ships
in Norfolk and send them send them the South. I
got a little inside information on that, and I think
that there's real concern there that they're being oversubscribed. But
this pivot to the to the Venezuela and South America

(01:41:48):
is is a little surprising to me.

Speaker 2 (01:41:50):
Do you I mean, you know, because I've talked about
my buddies who were in the Marines, like, you don't
move marines like that if you're not going to have
them do something, and you're you're moving these people because
you know, whether it's the oil underneath the ground in Guyana,
which of course Venezuela now claims is theirs, or they
really are trying to have a war on drugs. This
feels more than just the usual show.

Speaker 4 (01:42:11):
Yeah, I'll check. You're right. Those guys are right.

Speaker 13 (01:42:13):
You don't move marines unless you're going to do something
with them that they don't do well sitting on a
boat rocking around the sea and they want to get
off that boat and go do something, and you know
at some point you've got to bring them back. And
you know, a training exercise maybe turns into something else.
But it's definitely, you know, maybe they're going to go
to Puerto Rico or something. I don't know, but but

(01:42:34):
again there's just there's just too much going on there
that looks like it's focused on this counter narcotic mission
U and it's being you know, over militarized, and I
think that you know, you're bringing f We've seen reports
of the F thirty fives going out there like that,
you know, projecting power to drug cartels that don't have
the same weapons systems. I'm not sure they're going to

(01:42:55):
buy into it. They're just going to go under ground
for a while and lay low until until the heat
comes off.

Speaker 2 (01:43:00):
Talking to my client's military analyst, one more quick question,
we'll touch on what's going on in Gaza. They dropped leaflets,
told everybody to get out of there. Nobody knows where
to even go at this point in time, the West
Bank is now seeming to be the place that could
be the next place to explode. They're opening up the
battlefield and it looks like they're going to try to
take all of Palestine in the West Bank, which I

(01:43:24):
think opens up a nightmare that if you if you think, okay,
we'll get rid of all the Palestinians and the Arabs
and whoever else is here, and that's going to fix
the problem. We've talked about it. You've got Iran, that's
a very big country, by the way, people forget how
big it is. You've got Jordan, who's already got their
nightmares and they're like you've talked about how poor they are.
You've got Egypt, You've got you know, yeahmen Lebanon, you
have all of this stuff that is ready to just

(01:43:45):
seem boil over and instability looks like it's going to
take over everything in the Middle East.

Speaker 13 (01:43:51):
Well yeah, I mean yeah, they want the swooping evacuation
of Gaza City in particular. They have to go after
those tunnels. Chad, there's that's there, you know, that's their
shield and sword. We talked about that. And the only
way to do this, I mean, like I sawt an analogy.
This is like a hurricane style, you know, escalation if
they don't get out of there, and this all maybe
stops if a mass releases the hostages. You know, at
the end of the day, though you don't see any

(01:44:12):
movement on the side of Hamas to try to settle
us either they're they're not willing to release hostages, they're
not willing to come to the negotiation table you had,
you had the French and the British. I guess it
was that once they just declared, you know, this two
state solution, they thought they had something moving, and then
the Palestinians decided to back away. So I think, you know,

(01:44:34):
Israel's is it's in a race for its its existence still.
I think that they've they've got to do what they
think is right and in this at this point, you know,
the country has not internally, it does not have enough,
has not protested this enough. I mean, you know what
it's like for Israel to recall sixty thousand National Guard

(01:44:55):
units and hundreds of thousands on standby. Mean it's a
small country. I mean, it's really affecting their economy. So
it appears to me that the Israeli people are behind
this too right now. But again, doesn't look like it's
ending anytime soon.

Speaker 2 (01:45:05):
Love talking to your brother. He's the best in the business,
tired major and the best damn military analyst round Mike Lines.
Thanks so much, brother, We'll do it again next.

Speaker 4 (01:45:11):
Week, y chat. Thanks for me.

Speaker 2 (01:45:13):
Love talking to Mikey is the best damn military guy
in the business. Period. Okay, he's closed, end of story.
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(01:45:35):
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up straight ahead. Chad bensa shoe.

Speaker 1 (01:46:46):
Deep States, No deep doo doo e The Chat Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:46:53):
It's that portion of the program where we talk about
things that happen on this day but not in this year.

Speaker 1 (01:46:57):
Oh you know what time It is a kind of time,
a long time ago.

Speaker 15 (01:47:02):
Now it's time for this day in history. We look
back on this set to find out what the famous
things took place.

Speaker 2 (01:47:10):
All right, let's find out cool things took place on
this day in history. September ninth. Are you ready for this?
On this day seventeen seventy six, we became the United States,
Well the name did Cottonatal Congress formally adopts the name
the United States instead of United colonies. Eighteen fifteen, California
becomes the thirty first state. Nineteen forty eight, North Korea

(01:47:33):
has founded. Nineteen fifty six, Elvis Presley makes his first
appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show. Sixty million people tuned.
In nineteen seventy one, Attica Prison riot begins. That was
not a good thing in New York, you guys, remember,
I mean, this was a big deal, lasted four days

(01:47:53):
and became part of history with how bad it was.
And in nineteen ninety three, PLO in Israel sign a
p accord in Washington, d C. The Oslo Accords are
signed on the lawn with the Yasser Arafat and Yitzak
Rabin shaking hands under President Clinton's watch. That was a
big deal in more ways than people realize. And here

(01:48:16):
we are, yo, these many years later, and yeah, we're
still talking about that. Israel Palestine three two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Shows, your
ex your instant YouTube facebooke and more. Now you know

(01:48:36):
what happens on this day in history right here on
the Chad Benson Show. Well, that was a fun show
had by all, I'm telling you, guys, that venezuela thing.
We're going to get into more than just a few
kerfuffles over this. I have this bizarre feeling, and it's
not all about drugs. Either you heard it here first

(01:48:57):
or maybe somewhere else. But think of me first, is
what I'm trying to tell you. Reach out to us
across all of our social media three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Shows,
your ex your Insta, YouTube, and Facebook will be live
across all of those tonight right around seven o'clock Eastern.
If you have a chance chime in for that. You guys,
have a blessed rest of your Tuesday.

Speaker 7 (01:49:16):
I'm not really a fan of Tuesdays.

Speaker 2 (01:49:18):
I'm not really a fan of Tuesdays. I'm not any
of nobody's a fan of Tuesdays. Okay, but we do
get tacos, so go do some of that. As always, Night,
night Jack.

Speaker 1 (01:49:26):
This is the Chad Benson Show.
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