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November 13, 2025 109 mins
US government reopens after longest-ever shutdown. House Democrats release new Epstein emails referencing Trump. US mints final 1-cent coins after over 230 years in circulation. The No. 1 country song in the US right now is AI-generated. Trump, who slapped an extra $100,000 on the H-1B visa, now says there aren’t enough talented people in the U.S. to fill jobs. Grijalva Signs Epstein Petition, Starting Clock Toward a Vote. 
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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 (00:14):
Finally, finally, it's over.

Speaker 3 (00:21):
Emotion is adopted with the stroke of a pen on
the President's desk. The longest government shutdown ever is now over.

Speaker 4 (00:28):
We will never give in to extortion, because that's what
it was.

Speaker 3 (00:31):
The bill funds the government until January, extends funding for
snap in the VA until September, restores shutdown firings, and
guarantees for load employees get back pay.

Speaker 2 (00:43):
Okay, so there you go. All that stuff doesn't address
the healthcare issue, which we'll get to in a second.
Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, the one, the only, My.

Speaker 5 (00:55):
Johnson, Well good evening, every an. We'll feel very relieved tonight.
The Democrat shut down is finally over, thanks to House
and Senate Republicans who stood together to get the job done.
Absolutely no question in anybody's mind now that the Democrats
were responsible for this.

Speaker 6 (01:14):
What happened.

Speaker 5 (01:15):
Millions of American families went without food on their table.
You had millions of American stranded in airports, their flights
canceled and delayed. You had troops and federal employees wondering
where their next paycheck would come from. The Democrats openly admitted,
They openly admitted, many of them set it in their
own words that they used the American people as leverage

(01:36):
in this political game. They knew that it would cause
that pain to the people, and they did it anyway.
They did it for their own selfish purposes, their political purposes,
and it was a game they played with real people's alives.

Speaker 2 (01:49):
There you go, because the Republicans would never do that. Ever,
it doesn't address health care costs. It just doesn't, and
that's going to be a big issue. So yes, it's open.
But the reality when it comes to healthcare kids, prices

(02:09):
are going up. I have gotten more dms and text
messages sent to me with the oh my god, this
is insane how much prices are going up, and some
people even talking about how much is going up inside
of their company that they're shocked about. Well, now what

(02:32):
this is where we say, okay, great, you guys have
done this. You got it open. And we all agree
that Obamacare didn't work, it failed, But now what But
now what what are you going to do? Because I

(02:53):
saw Scott Bessant talk about, hey, you know what, I
know people are uncomfortable with the you know, not happy
and thrilled by the economy, or I don't worry, they're
gonna start feeling great in the middle of next year.
Middle of next year doesn't do it for the American people.
If you are, or if people are still terrified about
what's going on in the economy, come April, May or June,
you're cooked. In the midterms, you're cooked. And these price

(03:22):
hikes are baked in.

Speaker 7 (03:23):
This bill does nothing to address and fix the Republican
caused health care crisis. Republicans voted some months ago to
cut Medicaid, cut Medicare.

Speaker 2 (03:33):
Cut Obamacare.

Speaker 7 (03:34):
The first of those cuts that cuts to Obamacare take
effect literally in just a few weeks.

Speaker 2 (03:40):
Okay, first and foremost, mister Doyle, congress person, remember the
ACA is a Democrat contraption, So to say that it's
on them is once again very much bs. That being said,

(04:00):
it now is absolutely both of your issues that you
need to solve, and you understand that. But I have
to be honest, I don't trust that the Republicans have
some sort of plan at all. Good bad, are indifferent.
I just think they're going to throw out talking points.

Speaker 8 (04:21):
Healthcare costs are rising, they are out of control, and
we've always known this about Obamacare. We've made very good
steps to have transparency, to have reform, and competition.

Speaker 2 (04:32):
We need more of that. That's talking points. All those
things are talking points. You know, it's not going to
be a talking point if something goes from three hundred
a month to seven hundred and fifty or eight hundred
a month and you no longer are going to take insurance.
I've seen more and more, especially a younger, healthier group

(04:52):
of people who are just going to take a role.
And by younger, I don't mean they're in their twenties,
early thirties. I'm talking about people who are, you know,
forty five or fifty for like, you know what, I'm fine,
I'll be okay. So this is going to be very
interesting to see how they handle this. So it's back
open now and now they can go spend more money

(05:13):
and you know, play the game of politics. But the
healthcare issue is not going away. The cost of life
is getting more expensive. People aren't keeping up when it
comes to their wages, and now they're about to see
a bump that they didn't think was going to happen.
And Republicans, yes, Democrats, put the ACA together. You've got

(05:37):
an opportunity now to fix it, but talking points aren't
going to get it done just thisn't. We moved from
there to the other big news yesterday which really overshadowed
everything when it came to the government and the reopening
of it, which is the Epstein files. What did I say?

(05:58):
The ghost of Epstein isn't going anywhere. They can pretend
all they want that nothing is going to come out,
But yesterday, guess what stuff did come out? And we're
finding out more and more about a relationship between Trump
and Epstein. And I'm not saying they were best friends.
I've said this over and over again. I do not,

(06:19):
for at least at this moment, think that Trump did
anything untoward towards anyone. But I will say this, it
seems like he knew a lot more. And if it
comes out eventually that he knew pretty much everything that

(06:42):
was going on, and these emails kind of allude to that,
how could you not be done with them? I would
be I'm sorry. I've asked this yesterday at my local show.
I did it last night on the My Life. How
many of you have friends who are traffickers and you
still emailed them, hung out with them and asked one

(07:03):
of their friends who was helping them traffic, not to
do it anymore anybody. I didn't think so.

Speaker 9 (07:09):
In email exchanges with a New York Times reporter in
twenty fifteen, Epstein suggesting reporters, asked my houseman about Donald
almost walking through the door, leaving his noseprint on the
glass as young women were swimming in the pool, and
he was so focused he walked straight into the door.

Speaker 2 (07:26):
And that wasn't even some of the salaciousness. But it
shows again later on that there's a lot more to it.
There was a lot more in this and that some
of the stuff that he has said. I mean, because
here's the thing, the lies that he tells about this,
what's the issue with lies? You got to remember the lie.

(07:48):
You have to remember the truth. The truth is just
the truth. You have to remember the lie. And it was,
you know, we never really met, and then it was
weird kind friend. Then I found out what he did,
and I kicked him out, And then you find out
in these emails he never kick him out because he
was never a member. And all of a sudden, we're
all over the place and this stuff, and it is
not a look that is helping him at all. And

(08:09):
you could sit there and say, oh, this is lies,
this is bs. It just shows that he didn't do anything.
It shows he knew a lot knowing. Is this bad
in this situation? I'm sorry.

Speaker 10 (08:18):
The bombshell confirmation the revelations in this ongoing Trump Epstein scandal.
Donald Trump is in the Epstein emails, as Nicole Wallace,
I were just discussing that is now confirmed. Prior to this,
responsible people, lawyers who deal in evidence, journalists who deal
with what we know and don't know, weren't saying that yet.

(08:40):
Other people have said all kinds of things, by the way,
on both sides of this. But what you see on
your screen our headline here is the first time this
has been reported and confirmed with receipts. Because Epstein himself
emailed about Trump.

Speaker 2 (08:55):
And there was a lot of stuff in there about Trump,
you know, and well Epstein could blackmail Well, you're only
blackmailing somebody because you got something on someone. And this
stuff happened long before Trump was even thinking about president,
and after his first conviction, and then some of it
was after Trump was president, maybe using Trump as a

(09:17):
way to well get out of jail free which in
he didn't get out free, but he did get out
of jail. There's no doubt about that. There are so
many issues around this politically, yes, and the human side
of it as well. We're gonna be talking about this
throughout the day. A lot of things to get to

(09:37):
AI as well. It's happening, and it's happening fast. AI music,
but on top of that a I voice overs, which
has happened for a while, but now the celebrities are
getting involved and this is where the next battle is
going to come. Celebrity versus celebrity and artists versus artists

(09:57):
when it comes to licensing. So this will be interesting.
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson Show It's your ex, your Insta,
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your X, your Insta, your YouTube, Facebook and more will

(11:01):
be live on the old YouTube later on tonight coming up.
Ozzy Osbourne passed away. Here's a classic move by Trump
though that I thought class act talk a bit about that,
among other things. This is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (11:25):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (11:27):
I think this was class from Donald Trump, the President
of the United States, to take his time out of
his day to make a phone call when a legend
in his own time and will be a legend for
many many moons passed away Ozzy Osbourne and it came

(11:50):
out yesterday. There was a phone call a message left
for sharing, and the kids are sharing.

Speaker 4 (11:55):
Its subtle Trump and I just wanted to wish you
the best and the family of great as.

Speaker 2 (12:01):
He was amazing.

Speaker 4 (12:02):
He was an amazing guy. I met him a few times,
and I want to say that he was unique in
every way and talented. So I just wanted to wish
you the best. And it's a tough thing. I know
how close you were, and whatever I can do, take
care of yourself. Say hello to the family.

Speaker 2 (12:17):
Thanks by love him or hate him. He didn't have
to call and leave a voicemail.

Speaker 1 (12:24):
Listen.

Speaker 2 (12:26):
When it comes to politics, we know nobody comes out
or winner. I just thought that was cool, you know,
your busiest man in the world to take that minute
or two to say, hey, Sharon, kids, God bless you.
I just you know, like I say, I bust Trump's
balls a lot for some of the insanity, but I

(12:48):
also think there's a lot there that makes him who
he is. It does it makes him who he is.
He's at times as genuine as he gets. He's learning
to be a politician more and more. I was here
wheneverbody says, you know, that's why we we went for Trump,
because we want somebody he was not a politician. This
is his second go round as president. He knows what

(13:10):
he's doing. He's a politician now. And if you are
a developer in New York, you're a politician. Oh you
may not be voting on something, but you're helping somebody
get votes. I think we can all agree on that.

Speaker 11 (13:24):
Meanwhile, we are currently exploring all legal options to get
that done. I don't have a timeline for you or
any further details, but I can confirm for you that
the President made it clear he wants to make it happen,
and so his team of economic advisors are looking into it.

Speaker 2 (13:39):
What are they looking into. They're looking into checks. No, no, no, no, no.
Two thousand dollars checks to the American public is a
hard no. It is first of all, that money that's
going to have to potentially go back tearies, because that's

(14:02):
what there's you know, that's what this is. This is
the tariff money. Okay, So there's the tariff money that's
you know, been brought in, and it's like a tariff
dividend because remember where eybody's gonna get a doged dividend. Well,
that didn't happen. This is gonna be a tariff dividend.
This just feels like it's it's desperation, So don't First
of all, I thought that money was supposed to pay

(14:23):
down some of our ginormous debt we've got, which doesn't
seem like that's happening. So now what Well, now I'm
going to send out two thousand dollars checks. No, no, no,
that's not what you do. It's ridiculous to think you're
gonna do that. The interesting thing is, I think Trump

(14:45):
realizes he's gonna lose his case tariff wlies when it
comes to the Supreme Court, and so there's a lot
of different ways it's gonna go. But I've talked to
several people this week who are lawyers and and law
experts and been texting back and forth, and the sense
I get is it's going to be a very nuanced

(15:07):
decision which needs to happen sooner rather than later. So
get off your ass, right the oracles, and get this
thing done. Because Trump, you know, truthed out something the
other night that this is going to cost America three
trillion dollars and stuff, And part of that is he
is factoring in the reason that people are going to
be investing in our country in theory. Again, all that

(15:29):
stuff very non binding. Is because of the tariffs. So
I think what they're going to do is they're going
to issue a ruling that rules against his tariffs starting
now or whatever, and that way avoiding the payback. Because
even the people who were fighting against the tariffs, we're

(15:56):
also trying to make a you know, some sort of
argument that like, yeah, you know, ruling against him is fine,
but maybe we don't. It's it's very nuanced again, so
you know, they're also looking for ways they don't have
to pay it back. But as far as the two
thousand dollars checks, no, I mean, I know right likes, No,
we don't need those pay pay the debt down. Let's

(16:20):
do that. And then if you want tariffs, well then
you're gonna have to do what you should have done
and what Congress should do, which is do something. The
problem is Congress loves the Trump loves the fact that
he feels he can do anything he wants to go
around Congress. Congress loves the fact that he does that
because it takes them off the hook forever having any

(16:40):
receipts for voting on something that may be unpopular, and
let's be real, tariff numbers are very unpopular when it
comes to the polls and when it comes to the
potential for you know, I don't know your bank account
being a little bit smaller three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show, it's
your Insta, Facebook, and YouTube. We'll be on YouTube tonight.

(17:05):
We're playing around with the times, so we're gonna be
on YouTube tonight live and if you have a chance
go check us out, probably right around I would say
six o'clock. My time's Central, so seven Eastern. If you
have a chance to check us out, we'll be there
right around again, talking a lot of stuff about AI tonight,
where AI is going, because I think it's vitally important

(17:28):
and the potential of the bubble as well in the
world of AI. If you missed the show, grad the podcast.

Speaker 12 (17:33):
This is the Chad Benson Show, Son, Chad Benson, Joe.

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

Speaker 2 (18:03):
A penny for your thoughts.

Speaker 13 (18:05):
The nostalgia the penny holds is priceless. From the candy
it used to.

Speaker 14 (18:09):
Buy squirrelnuts, what's the little fishes?

Speaker 13 (18:14):
To those custom engraved souvenir machines. The last time a
coin was discontinued was the half cent in eighteen fifty seven.
Now nearly one hundred and seventy years later, coin collectors say,
just like no one misses the half sent, people will
forget about the penny.

Speaker 2 (18:31):
No, yes, goodbye penny. We wish you all the best
because it's a bad investment a penny, because it cost
us almost four pennies to make a penny.

Speaker 13 (18:42):
There are still three hundred billion pennies in circulation, but
retailers have voiced concerns as penny supplies run low, saying
the phase out was abrupt and came with no guidance
from the government. Some stores now warning customers about a
penny shortage and the possibility of having to round up, so.

Speaker 2 (19:01):
You round up prices. We will adapt to it. I
think we all recognize that and we wish it all
the best. The penny, there's still a lot of them
out there, but it just was ridiculous. I think we
recognize that. So if it's three ninety nine, just make
it four bucks. No, Chad's not like the taxes again.

(19:24):
I'm just trying to make it. If you owe three
ninety nine, rather than give somebody back a penny, how
many times you can just keep the penny? Just it
was not smart.

Speaker 15 (19:36):
Right.

Speaker 2 (19:36):
Maybe in the future the penny will be cheap to make,
but I just think it's time that we wish it
all the best, good good luck to you, penny. Can
we get rid of the nickel the dime in the quarter?
We're keeping those for now, for now, And I do

(19:56):
mean for now because you never know what may come.
Because they're going to take away cash, Chad, they would
like to you want to hear something crazy. We So
my mother in law tried to go. We had some
money out there, and I said. My wife goes, hey,
can you put some money in our bank? And so
we're out here in Nashville, she's out there in Arizona.
She says yes. She just takes some money over and

(20:21):
they say, I'm sorry, we don't take cash anymore. Wait what, yeah,
we don't take cash anymore. I was shocked by that
the bank didn't take cash. It wasn't like an absorbitent
amount of money. It wasn't like, oh, well, we've got
to report this. It wasn't even think close to that.

(20:41):
But still, how bizarre is that? What the hell is
going on? So you're a bank and you refuse to
take cash? What happened? She had to write a check?
Just so weird. It's just so bizarre. We live in
bizarro world. Speaking of bizarro world, are you ready for it? AI?

(21:02):
We talk about AI lot and there's a reason for that.
This is different. Though AI is here, it's not going anywhere.
I work in AI every day, My uncle works in AI.
We have a company that is entertainment AI focused, So
we are about this in a serious way. And not

(21:22):
only is AI going to be more prevalent in the
entertainment world, it is here already in the music world.
It jumped so fast, so quick.

Speaker 16 (21:33):
It's the hot new country song at the top of
the charts with a catchy tune sung by a handsome cowboy.
But don't hold your breath to see him sing it live,
because he's not real. The singer and the song were
created with AI technology. Les Trent shows us how easy
it was to make a number one song.

Speaker 17 (21:53):
He's a ruggedly handsome country singer with a strong voice.
Justin first stardom.

Speaker 18 (21:58):
Hey, nonwar ibit all.

Speaker 17 (22:02):
His name is Breaking Rust and now his song walk
My Walk is number one on Billboard's Country Digital Song
Sales Chart.

Speaker 2 (22:12):
Work my finger roll, while nobody care. It sounds awesome
by the way it does. And he's not the first,
but he's the first to go number one.

Speaker 17 (22:26):
So if you're asking who the heck is breaking rust, well,
hold on to your cowboy hat. He's one hundred percent
all AI generated.

Speaker 2 (22:37):
All the thing that gives me coming is listing, don't all.

Speaker 17 (22:42):
Nothing is real, not the voice, not the dude, and
let alone roll offline all in two point one million
people have already listened to the song on Spotify and
eleven point five million on YouTube. Who but it's sparking
a huge debate.

Speaker 10 (23:03):
You can write the lyrics, you can create the sound,
but the heart and the soul belongs to the artist,
which is true.

Speaker 2 (23:10):
Look, you know, I get that the entertainment industry is worried.
I work in a field. By the way, for those
of you not keeping scores, called the radio world, right,
you're listening to me. Many of you are listening to
me all over the country. And you may think, oh,
Chad's in my neck of the woods. Our business has
been this way for a long time. Not AI. But
the replacement side, the downsizing and all this kind of stuff.

(23:32):
I get it. Opportunities are going to still be there,
and no, you can't replace that feel the soul. Somebody
still has to come up with the idea. But it
is not hard to create something incredible and fast. It isn't.
And this is something that the entertainment industry, this side

(23:54):
of it, has never had to deal with other parts
of it, right, so other parts of the entertainment world
in particular, you know, and again we're the bowlers in
the entertainment world radio, but we've had to deal with
this for two plus decades, sing it downsizing, seeing a
one size fits all kind of thing put out there.
But for the music industry, and for especially the television

(24:18):
and industry and the entertainment industry where we think of
movies and stuff, we're going to get to that in
a second. They're going to have a whole new world
coming at them.

Speaker 17 (24:26):
Just how easy is it to create a song completely
generated by AI intelligence.

Speaker 1 (24:31):
I'm using a.

Speaker 17 (24:32):
Program called Sona. What I'm going to do is create
a song about the TV show Inside Edition simply by
typing in here, make a song about the TV show inside.

Speaker 18 (24:43):
Audition, Inside dish Shine, All the Shadow, All the Secret.

Speaker 17 (24:56):
Now all we need is a handsome, rugged guy like
Breaking Rust to take us to number one on the
music charts.

Speaker 16 (25:04):
Inside, the use of AI in the music world is
very controversial. A number of artists, including Elton John, Paul McCartney,
and Coldplay, are fighting for stronger laws to prevent their
music from being used by AI creators.

Speaker 2 (25:27):
Now that's interesting what they're doing. Okay, So they're trying
to prevent that side of it. Some people are embracing
it and seeing opportunities. Case in point, the voice world,
actors their voices licensing.

Speaker 6 (25:44):
It what makes a voice iconic?

Speaker 19 (25:48):
This morning, some of Hollywood's most recognizable names lending their
voices to AI.

Speaker 2 (25:53):
My name is Michael Caine.

Speaker 10 (25:56):
I am thrilled to announce that my voice and I
join eleven Lamps.

Speaker 19 (26:01):
On Tuesday, AI company eleven Labs announcing actor Michael Kine
will be among the voices added to its Iconic Marketplace,
a new service where anyone can pay to use a
celebrity's AI generated voice and content from commercials to audio books.

Speaker 20 (26:16):
Gon Mi Permiso, eleven Labstratus.

Speaker 2 (26:22):
How cool is that? How cool is that? So now
you can have your little company voiced by Michael Kane.
If you want Michael Kaine, it is. And see the
difference is they're licensing their voice. Okay, how many times
do we talk about every year how much money Michael

(26:43):
Jackson's estate makes, or Elvis Presley or Bob Marley and
they have produced some music anymore. But they're still using
it for certain things. Well, those things are going to
start to change. That's why these things are when people
are buying up these massive Like Queen just sold theirs
for what a billion dollars there, but they sold everything.

(27:03):
Kiss did the same thing, and it sold their likeness
because they're going to produce stuff still in the future,
which I find again fascinating, this difference between stealing somebody's likeness,
right and actually licensing their likeness, their voice, their acting skills,
whatever it is.

Speaker 19 (27:22):
Matthew McConaughey, an eleven Labs investor, says he's using the
tech himself to create a bilingual version of his voice
to connect with Spanish speaking fans.

Speaker 1 (27:31):
In his weekly newsletter.

Speaker 19 (27:33):
Moralues, his AI generated voice is not for sale. In
addition to Michael Caine, eleven Labs even featuring AI generated
voices of late stars like Judy Garland sometimes the road
looks long and John Wayne, don't talk.

Speaker 2 (27:48):
About doing the right thing, partner, just do it.

Speaker 19 (27:52):
I think it signals that actors believe that AI is
coming to Hollywood, whether they want it to or not.

Speaker 2 (28:00):
It absolutely is. You have no idea. I'm going to
tell you guys this right now. So we work in
this every day. And my uncle is like yesterday he
was up in La Hollywood on several meetings and because
we have a show that is going to be on
a major network and it's AI, and Hollywood is doing

(28:23):
this weird thing where especially the executives and whatnot, they
are talking the talk about no. I mean, we want
to use a little bit of it, but not too much,
et cetera, et cetera. But behind closed doors they're going, Okay,
what can we do? How much can we save? It
is incredible, though, what is going on. And it's not
about replacing the human altogether. But what it does do

(28:46):
is it gives, really it democratizes, gives everybody an opportunity
who's creative. Right, whether you're in your basement right Omaha,
or you're in Hollywood. You don't need a billion dollar
studio behind you to come up with something incredible and
have that talent recognized and build a life on it.

(29:09):
But yeah, the celebrity side of stuff, I get the
fear that there is, but the opportunities I think are
just so amazing.

Speaker 19 (29:16):
The deal coming amid a string of controversies on the
use of AI and its potential to replace real artists.
A couple of months ago, there was instant backlash over
the AI generated actress Tilly Norwood, actors like Emily Blunt
calling it really really scary, her creator claiming Tilly was
not a replacement for a human being, but a creative work.

Speaker 1 (29:38):
And last year Scarlett Johansson calling.

Speaker 19 (29:40):
Out Open AI saying it's new voice assistant sounded eerily
similar to her own voice. Open AI denying they modeled
the assistant after Johansson.

Speaker 2 (29:50):
It sounded similar. Well, you're gonna get that. I mean,
there's people out there sound like me. People are I mean,
it sounded similar. Let's not pretend that it didn't. So
there's going to be a little bit of a crowd.
And there's a difference again between stealing somebody's professional identity
and actually creating something. Because the person who is a

(30:14):
professional has decided, Hey, it's okay, go ahead, use my voice,
use my likeness, pay me for it.

Speaker 19 (30:21):
But as some real actors voice concerns, others are embracing
AI and letting their voices be heard.

Speaker 2 (30:28):
Because technology is just the media. This is humanity amplifying.

Speaker 19 (30:37):
A source close to McConaughey says that he's just testing
out the technology for now. Representatives for Michael Caine did
not respond to our request for comment, but in a
statement provided by eleven Labs of Variety, the veteran actor said,
it's not about replacing voices, it's about amplifying them.

Speaker 2 (30:54):
Amen. It's going to be uncomfortable for a while, and
everybody's like, well, your business, my busines me. There's already
a company out there that produces thousands of podcasts a
week on all kinds of stuff in all kinds of languages.
That's all AI generated. That's all AI generated. But think

(31:16):
about this for a second. Without the human emotion, even
with the songs, Okay, it's a perfect example. Without human
emotion and somebody coming up with the idea to create
a song, there would be no need for any of this.

(31:37):
You still need that human emotion you still need somebody
to go through something that they decide would be a
great thing and put that out there for people to
also bond and understand. Very interesting. I'm excited and I
can see why people are nervous to three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson

(31:58):
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Birch Gold Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (33:19):
If you like talk radio like Chad Benson likes his meals,
you've come to the perfect place for takeout.

Speaker 2 (33:26):
Just in time for the holidays. Strike at Starbucks.

Speaker 21 (33:30):
It could get a little tricky ordering your favorite holiday drink.
Union Starbucks baristas are going on strike today across forty
cities in the US. Over one thousand union workers are
calling the strike red Cup Rebellion in protest of what
they call a union busting and failure to finalize a
fair union deal. They are asking for a better contract
and labor conditions. The baristas say they are prepared to

(33:53):
make it the longest strike in the company's history and
hitting during the holiday season. Workers plan to pick it
outside of stores.

Speaker 2 (34:02):
Wait a minute, is it the red cup rebellion? Or
is it the bear cup rebellion? So they're going to
go on strike, But how are you going to go
on strike when you've got the bear cup? Wait? What
you guys have not seen the bear cup? The bear
cup is causing people to lose their blanking minds. I've
seen people fight on videos on the internet. So it's

(34:23):
this Starbucks bear cup just in time for the holidays,
And yeah.

Speaker 22 (34:29):
People are going bonkers for these adorable teddy bear glass
cups at Starbucks. The twenty ounce holiday bottles called bear
Resta Cold Cups debuted yesterday and immediately sold out, but
most customers are leaving empty handed. This isn't much sought
after bear Resta Cold Cup. It's a bear shaped glass

(34:49):
mug with a green beanie and a Starbucks logo on
its belly. It sells for twenty nine to ninety five,
but if you're looking for one, be prepared to spend
a lot more.

Speaker 2 (35:00):
What how much more?

Speaker 22 (35:02):
On eBay they're selling for up to five hundred and
fifty dollars fine, how are you?

Speaker 21 (35:08):
Oh?

Speaker 17 (35:08):
You have it perfect? Look at that.

Speaker 22 (35:10):
We found ours on Facebook Marketplace and paid a whopping
two hundred and ninety dollars for it, nearly ten times
the original price.

Speaker 2 (35:19):
Dina Palovic lined up.

Speaker 22 (35:20):
At four point thirty am and ended up going to
four different Starbucks before scoring one.

Speaker 23 (35:27):
You have a bear?

Speaker 21 (35:29):
I know what do you love about it?

Speaker 24 (35:31):
Honestly?

Speaker 25 (35:32):
I feel like being able to see the drink through
the cup is my favorite part.

Speaker 3 (35:36):
And I do love bears, always have.

Speaker 22 (35:37):
For many Starbucks, bear cup is a bear necessity.

Speaker 2 (35:42):
Look what they did there. Bare necessity, a barn necessity,
a simple bare necessity. People are paying how much again
for this? That is unbearable? Don't again with the craziness
so insane. Just so you guys are going on strike,
red cup, revolution, rebellion, whatever it is, and then these

(36:03):
people are paying two three, four, five hundred dollars on
eBay to get a bear cup. I like the fact
that I can see in it, because I've never seen
a glass couple before. The hell was wrong three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show
to you. Actually, it's to coming up a lot of
good stuff in our number two. You can keep it
right here. This is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (36:23):
This is the Chad Benson Show. The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (36:53):
The government reopened. Yay, it's an honor now to sign
this incredible bill and get our country working again. There
you go, So our country's working again. And that's where
that went. And now that it's open, people are like, okay, now,
what time to move on. We're over this. We don't

(37:13):
care at this moment in time because there's other stuff
out there. And yes, it is about Epstein. No, yeah
it is. By the way, I've got an Epstein song
you gets ready to.

Speaker 1 (37:21):
Hear It's buried in a crane phone.

Speaker 2 (37:29):
With the second one.

Speaker 14 (37:30):
No one's.

Speaker 18 (37:32):
Like a smoke Dan Joy secret and under a faint.

Speaker 2 (37:38):
Who's jilty? Who swash? No, it's side shout a restave.

(38:00):
Oh I love it, sir Epstein's song. Now. So that's
what everybody's paying attention to. And the reason is quite simple,
because uh, it got real yesterday in a way that
felt way different than a lot of the other stuff
out there. Because the emails, a few of them leaked, well,

(38:21):
they's strategic and the way they did this was yeah,
you know, I don't care. There's some stuff in here
that's very serious. And I will tell you this over
and over again. I continue to go on and on,
and I know want people to go, well, do't b bed.
Here is the reality of its simple as I can
put it. If we find out that any way, shape
or form, he knew all of the stuff that was

(38:41):
going on, and it sounds like he knew a lot
of stuff and he is covering up. I'm done with him.
I think everybody else should be too. And I don't
care that you want two dollars gas because if you
want two dollars gas and you really don't care what
happened to kids, and I don't give a rats ask
about anything else you have to say, period, case closed,
end of a story. Nobody should. I thought you were

(39:02):
going to train the swamp, I said last night. You
know what he is. He's a hippo. It's not very nice.
I'm not talking about size. Okay, he's a hippo. People
think the swamp is full of you know, crocodiles and
stuff like that. Yeah it is. But the hippo, that's
the king right there, that's the king in the swamp.
Hippo a butt you and half hippo about a gaiter
in half hippo about a crocodile and half and does

(39:24):
it all the time? Are you protecting people? It's a
fair question. I think it's a very fair question. And
I think the way that the and let's be honest too,
what do we always talk about the cover up is
worse than the crime? We always say these kind of things.
The Department of Justice has failed in a major way
from jump when it comes to Epstein.

Speaker 26 (39:47):
It's to me been an extraordinary example of the Justice
Department and mishandling this whole thing. It's sort of one
of these situations of, you know, the cover up in
a way is worse than the crime. Months ago, Pam
Bondi talked to about how she had Jeffrey Epstein's client
lists sitting on her desk. That sort of gave fuel
to the fire then and really started all this. And

(40:07):
then yesterday it is reporting from our colleague Kendelanian that
Lauren Bobert, who's been one of the House members who
signed this petition for pushing for all these documents to
be released, was brought into the White House and in
the meeting there, Attorney General Bondi and FBI Director Cash
Betel pressured her to stop pushing for the documents to
be released, and so it's just extraordinary. And in the

(40:29):
middle of it all, you had Todd Blanche, the Deputy
Attorney General, going down spending two days with Glaanne Maxwell,
interviewing her but not asking really tough questions. And subsequently,
as part of that, Maxwell's now in a much nicer
federal facility in Texas. So all of this shows that

(40:49):
the Justice Department is sort of making the scandal worse
and I think damaging its own credibility in the process.

Speaker 2 (40:56):
That whole thing with Bondie, she's useless. I had higher
hopes for her. She is, it's useless and would she
handed out all the folders? It's phase one? What having
a phase two? Nothing? The knucklehead cash Motail comes out
and he goes like, oh, he didn't do anything, He
never did anything. He didn't traffic to anybody but himself. Really,
because there's a guy in England used to be a prince.

(41:20):
Now he's a pauper. He's living in the king's tool
shed in the backyard because of what imaginary things that
took place with Ebsteine in him and young girls. Oh
and the whole thing with Bolbert too. I'm telling you
good honor for staying strong.

Speaker 6 (41:38):
Wait.

Speaker 27 (41:39):
I got to give credit to Lauren Bobert to walk
into the White House, the center of power of the
free world, really and to sustain that and to come
back out and to be solid. And also to Nancy Mason,
Marjorie Taylor Green. There was all the speculation that they
might take their names off, and they never did.

Speaker 17 (41:55):
So it's not a hoax.

Speaker 27 (41:57):
It's not a moot point.

Speaker 2 (41:59):
It is a very serious thing.

Speaker 27 (42:00):
There are a thousand victims, and there are survivors who
have had a press conference with Rocanna and I and
that's what we're fighting for.

Speaker 2 (42:08):
Justice for them. I love that Thomas Massey right there now.
Last night, you know, the it was very interesting. They
tried to make this thing go away as fast as possible.
Then Tim Burchett here, and I've talked to him on
more than a few occasions. You know, he's out there
going well. We tried to get it done. I tried
to throw it on the floor. I tried to do
all these things, this discharged petition, and it's just a hoax.

(42:31):
It's not real. That's why I just put a bill up.

Speaker 24 (42:33):
I just tried to move it ahead because what you're
seeing right now is what exactly is going to happen,
going to continue happening.

Speaker 2 (42:39):
Everybody's going to pull a little piece mal portions.

Speaker 24 (42:41):
Sorry about that.

Speaker 11 (42:42):
I got a pandimate.

Speaker 2 (42:43):
I'm starting baptist.

Speaker 24 (42:44):
I'm going to pull portions of it out and it's
going to try to fit their own little narrative.

Speaker 2 (42:49):
Both sides are going to do it.

Speaker 24 (42:50):
You all know it, and you're all going to feed
upon it.

Speaker 2 (42:52):
Let's just get the dadgum bill out.

Speaker 1 (42:54):
Let's vote it out.

Speaker 2 (42:54):
And the Democrats opposed me on it. It's stupid. It's
all about politics. It's not about taking care.

Speaker 1 (42:59):
Of young ladies.

Speaker 24 (43:00):
You've got abused and way we should.

Speaker 2 (43:01):
Take care of them.

Speaker 24 (43:02):
But there's a processing place. The Democrats have had it
for four years and didn't do it dad gum thing.
And you know if Trump was in that thing, Biden,
the rest of you, Kamala Harris, I mean, he's the
Antichrist to them.

Speaker 2 (43:13):
They would have already had it out. Not necessarily understand
everybody always thinks that, well, they would have already done
it by now, they didn't pay attention to it for
years because they didn't think it was anything more than
a conspiracy theory that the right had made up about it,
and they paid no attention to it. By the way,
Trump had it as well. Remember he died under Trump's watch, mysteriously,

(43:40):
might add, And what he put up last night was
a discharge petition, and they're like, the Democrats voted against it.
There was a reason. So it's there's so many parliamentary
rules and things that go on. So the reason this
didn't go through last night the discharge. Okay, So this
moves the bill automatically right onto the floor, straight out

(44:03):
of the committee. Okay, this is not allowed under house rules.
He skipped all of the things like the thirty days
in committee, assigned petition, being placed on the discharge calendar,
all of the things to go with it. And the
issue with something like this is you can blame the Democrats,
but Democrats can't stop Republican from offering a privileged motion.

(44:26):
Democrats cannot block recognition, only speaker can. Democrats cannot control
what the speaker brings up. Okay, and so it's kind
of he say, it's politics, Yeah, it is politics. And
even if, by the way, even if it went out
there and there's a vote, they're going to be vote
next week. And Mike Johnson's already said that where does

(44:49):
it go, Well, then it all comes out. It doesn't
because this is a law, and because it's written as
a law, it goes from here the House to the Senate,
where Thune will have to take it up. Do you
think it's getting sixty votes there? Probably not. You think

(45:09):
they're going to break the filibuster for that, probably not.
But let's just say they did get sixty votes and
it goes to Trump. He has to sign it before
any of it comes out. So do I think we're
going to find out anything?

Speaker 7 (45:26):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (45:26):
I think over time we will, but it'll be over
a lot of time. And do I have certain suspicions
that a lot of stuff's being covered up? I think
we all do. And do I think this White House
among one of many white houses and powerful people in
DC if later role in some of this, Oh you
bet you three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four

(45:46):
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the number four relief for Relief Factor Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (47:08):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (47:10):
Are Americans unskilled and untalented when it comes to work?
Trump thinks? So what, yeah, you know for all of
the stuff, cause you guys know, I push back on
Trump that being said, I give Trump props where props
is due. You know, nobody ever sees that side of it.
They just yell at me. But the other night on

(47:32):
the lower Ingram thing, we had the interview on Fox.
One of the things they talked about was h one
B Visus And I will say, even for the economy
and some of the other stuff that has upset some
of MAGA, what he said the other night about American

(47:58):
workers not having the talent has angered more people who
are Trump supporters. And I mean like Trump supporters, MAGA,
not even just I mean they're sold for the cause
of America first. And this pissed more people off than

(48:23):
anything else Again that I've seen him say, I've seen
him do or put into play. I mean, this was
something that I was shocked by how angry some people got.
People get angry at me all the time, but I
was shocked by this.

Speaker 20 (48:40):
Does that mean the H one B visa thing will
not be a big priority for your administration? Because if
you want to raise wages for American workers, you can't
flood the country with tens of thousands or hundreds ofs.

Speaker 2 (48:51):
And we also do have to bring in talent. When
we've got to be a talent.

Speaker 20 (48:57):
We don't have talented people.

Speaker 28 (48:58):
Now you don't have you don't have certain talents, and
you have to people have to learn. You can't take
people off an unimplyment like an unemployment line and say
I'm going to put you into a factory who we're
going to make missiles or I'm going to do we
ever do it before?

Speaker 2 (49:12):
And that the whole no talent thing, and he doubled
down on it again yesterday. Look, there's so much that
goes into this, and we've talked about this in the past.
When the Chips Act came in and they decided to
build the semiconductor you know, the chips and everything out
there in Arizona, one of the factories, I said, you
couldn't fill it today with workers who could do this.

(49:34):
Because we don't do those things doesn't mean you can't
teach people. See that's the issue right there. You've got
to be Look, we're going to bring people in to
get this thing off the ground because we need a
force that can hit the ground running in some of
these situations that we're not going to be able to
do here in America because we do not have the

(49:55):
manufacturing talent because we stop being a manufacturing powerhouse a
long time ago. So yeah, there's going to be a
need to bring people in who know what they're doing
and to train up our workforce. The issue, though, really is,

(50:19):
and this is a bigger issue, is why would I
want to pay an American eight one hundred thousand dollars
a year when I could pay this guy fifty five thousand.
That's a bigger issue. Profit matters. Let's be real. Profit
is extremely important. I understand that, but that is also

(50:40):
a big part of what this is. The no talent
thing hit in a way where it pissed people off
because it made him seem like he doesn't like American workers.
You know, I think he likes American corporations better. But
the reality of this is more nuanced than just American
workers can't. But of course they can do it. Of

(51:02):
course they can. But while they fight about whether or
not it's American workers and are they talented or they're not,
in truth, it's just about dollars and cents. Bring somebody
in that they believe is going to work just as hard,
if not harder, less headache, at about a third to
a half less than an American worker would. We moved from

(51:27):
there to the economy. People are worried about their jobs.
But you know what else, Inflation still sitting way up there, nerves, frustration, anger.
That was the other thing that pissed people off the
other night is you can tell people a thousand times
how great everything is. If they don't feel it, guess
what happens. Yeah, they don't buy it, and they start
to think that you're out of touch. But prices are up.

(51:51):
Scott Bessen came out and said, Ah, don't worry. By
middle of next year, people are going to feel better
by the economy. Here's the thing in politics, Scott, you
don't have that kind of time. If at the middle
of next year things were still shaky, but we start
to get feeling a little bit better, that's too late
in the world of politics. You need it now, not

(52:12):
next week, not next month, not next year, you need
it now that people feel better.

Speaker 29 (52:19):
The Treasury Secretary now promising action to bring down coffee
and fruit prices, likely in the form of tariff relief.

Speaker 24 (52:26):
You're going to see some substantial announcement over the next
couple of days.

Speaker 29 (52:30):
A new poll finds that more than half of working
Americans are worried about losing their jobs.

Speaker 2 (52:35):
Which is a big deal. And speaking of jobs, which
is not being talked about. And this is something because
we get no information or data right the White House
is not really and I don't look, I gotta be
real with you. I don't trust what's coming out of
the White House right now when it comes to any

(52:57):
of this data, because if he doesn't like something, they're
fired or you know, it's they're against me. So I
care about what's the reality of it. And we're losing
in excess of anywhere between ten and fifteen thousand jobs
a week right now. And the private employers because everybody's

(53:21):
trying to put together to data for stuff. You know
what about this, Well, guess what Right now? Private employers
are struggling. They struggle big time in October and Wall
Street projects a grim job market going forward doesn't mean
it's not going to get better, and I think it will.
But I feel like right now we are using smoke

(53:44):
and mirrors to try to balance this message here of
how great everything is, and that's not a place I
think that's going to end up being super successful. I
think eventually, like Djenga, the blocks are going to come
down three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty
three at Chat Benson Show, is your ex, your insta

(54:06):
YouTube of Facebook and more? This is the Chat Benson Show,
the Chad.

Speaker 1 (54:20):
Benson Show, The Chat Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (54:42):
Hop topic is immigration. I think we know that very
hot topic. Last week, Zor Madonni won the race to
be the mayor of New York City. And you have
a lot of people out there who run around and

(55:04):
say crazy things to gin up fear in people. Because fear,
if we've talked about fear, is an emotion that is
much easier to sway an influence that a conversation that
has nuance, And that's just it. I mean, you know,

(55:26):
the best sales books in the world are psychology books,
because if I can get you to act on emotion,
no matter what it is, fear creed, you know it's
going to get you to do something. If I if
you want to be analytical and actually find out everything
you can about something and have a coaching argument to

(55:46):
why you should or shouldn't do something, that's going to
take a lot of time and you may not go
the direction I want you to go. So alas here
we go, and that's why you get things like this.

Speaker 6 (55:54):
I'm a traditionalist, and you know, you know I'll come
up here sixty vo tell you that sounded great. But
we're in a different country, Steve, this is a different time.
We just saw what happened in New York. We lost
New York. It will be completely Muslim in three or
four years. That's what they want. They're gonna have everything
free there for them, and they're just gonna spread throughout

(56:15):
the country. We better wake up and smell the roses.

Speaker 2 (56:17):
You're insane, Tommy. Timberville should have stayed in coaching. For
those of you who don't know, he used to coach Auburn.
They're looking for a coach. There's fired theirs just putting
it out there, Tommy, But that's nuts. It's all about
fear man. If I can get you to react to
something base, pureland of motion, that's a win. So there

(56:40):
are people out there that go, yeah, it's absolutely right,
We're going to become like Dearborn, New York in a
couple years is going to be full sharia law. Really okay,
good luck with that. It's not gonna happen. And the
fact that you say it is scary, and the fact
that people believe it is also scary to happen. Now,

(57:02):
I am a proponent of legal immigration, always have been.
I am absolutely a proponent of that, But I'm also
a proponent of if you come here for good. See
if you're coming here and you want to work here
for six months and then you want to go back
to where ever came from, you know what here for
booty calls. We say, you're not here for putting a

(57:24):
ring on it. But if you're going to put a
ring on it, it's because you love what this country offers.
You love our freedoms, our liberty, the fact that we
are diverse, yet we have our own thoughts and ideas,
and we do not want to sty me those things.
That we have a constitution that gives us the opportunity
to practice whatever religion or no religion, to have the

(57:46):
freedom of speech, to do these amazing things that we have,
and the constitution protects those things from the government. And
you come here because you value those things and you
want to be a part of this. That is wonderful.
Europe is having a really bad problem right now. One
of the interesting things is Denmark is coming at it

(58:08):
in a much different way, with a thing called parallel societies.

Speaker 30 (58:13):
Jobs, health, life satisfaction outperforming other nations by far, but
that's drawn in people from other nations, and the non
nees has crept in.

Speaker 31 (58:22):
I don't think we should HiPE, for example, numbers of
different ethnic groups, crime records.

Speaker 30 (58:29):
The political stunds have shifted, and some old assumptions about
party politics no longer applied.

Speaker 11 (58:35):
As I was part of the party and I left
them because I couldn't recognize the party anymore.

Speaker 30 (58:45):
I thought that soon could be replicated in the UK
as our government looks here for inspiration.

Speaker 2 (58:51):
That's right, they're looking over there for this now. What
is a parallel society act. It's very interesting what's going
on in Britain, going on in Scandinavia and Denmark is
is a bit different. But the way that they come
at this in Denmark is they go into areas that

(59:13):
they essentially look at and say, area, these are ghetto areas,
these are districts what they call it's called the ghetto
Luvin or the ghetto Plant And they go into these
areas and they look and they say, all right, first
of all, there's over a thousand residents. That's that's one
of the things. It has to do with employment, right,
So if there's a high case of unemployment plus for

(59:39):
the last two years, so of your residence, the ones
that are able to work for the last two years,
they've been unemployed at least forty percent of the time.
On top of that, inhabitants, residents, people that are living there.
And because this is so much everybody thinks this this

(59:59):
swa the people that have come from other nations have
landed there just recently. No, this has happened over two
and a half three decades. So they look at people
that are thirty to sixty. Do you have a primary education?
So did you come here thirty years ago and you
stopped at like second grade and you didn't do anything else? Okay,
well that's an issue. They look at income. But yes,

(01:00:20):
they also look at non Western country demographics. So if
you've come from a non Western country and this is
the most important fifty percent plus and everybody's co habiting
and living here, you're shutting out the rest of the world.
You're not assimilating, you're not becoming part of society. They're

(01:00:42):
going to break that area up and they're going to
move people to different places, which is of course called
controversy because you're like, wow, could they really do that. Yeah,
they're really doing that. In some places, they'll actually knock
all the buildings down. See. The thing about what makes
Denmark and Finland and all of these places work is

(01:01:04):
the fact that they trust their government. Number one. They
absolutely trust their government because they feel their government, you know,
tells them the things that they need to hear, and
their government pretty much does so unlike our government. But
you're part of society. You're part of the fabric of society,

(01:01:27):
and the social safety nets and the things that are
available to the people are there because we're all doing
our part. When you shut yourself off from everybody, well,
guess what, that doesn't work. And the Danes and the
Norwegians and the Swedes, they're over it. They're over people

(01:01:49):
coming there for the great social safety net and not
being part of society and doing their part.

Speaker 30 (01:01:57):
But for those that are here have been here for
pretty much their whole lives, and they now feel less
welcome day to day walking around.

Speaker 31 (01:02:06):
Yeah, but I can't change the feelings that they have.
Of course, I'm unhappy with them not feeling welcome. Yeah, yeah,
you can say that. But we need to discuss these
issues in an honest fashion. We don't think we should
hide the GDP for cabits are in different ethnic groups.

(01:02:26):
We think it's important to discuss this because it gives
a sign of where the problems are.

Speaker 30 (01:02:32):
Refugees granted asylum are allowed to remain temporarily until their
home nation is deemed safe for family reunifications. The Danish
resident must not have claimed benefit for three years.

Speaker 2 (01:02:45):
And that's very interesting. Again, they're all changing the rules.
Denmark was the first one, as they said, to say
it out loud. They did, even the left side of
the aisle all right. In one of the things they said, Look,
we have too many people coming here for the benefits,
and nobody wants to ney the responsibility our society. The
model we've built is going to collapse. Sweden finally came

(01:03:07):
around and they said they regret waiting so long to
talk about it, and the reason was simple. Crime, segregation,
unemployment gaps, integration failures was number one. So a lot
of what they have going on is not so much
identity as it is integration. The Brits have a different
issue going on, a much different issue, and theirs is

(01:03:31):
the loss of culture, because what's happening is the government
there is telling them, hey, you're proud of being British.
That makes people uncomfortable. You want to hang the flag?
Guess what that makes people uncomfortable. The fact that you
had politicians saying the Saint George Cross is offensive, that
schools could hang national symbols, restricted flags, and that even

(01:03:58):
talking about being a brit was exclusionary and bad. That
pissed people off. But the thing that started all of
it and made it even bigger was the Grooming gang scandal,
and that destroyed the public trust with the Brits because
they allowed a two tier system of justice, They allowed

(01:04:18):
these things to go on, and they feared there would
be issues with them being accused of police and officials
of being racist and because they came from certain regions
and ethnicities, they thought, well, there's going to be Islamophobia
and all this stuff, and next thing you know, the
entire situation has eroded. So the identity is the Brits

(01:04:43):
for the Scandinavians, which by the way, their population of
Muslims is less than ten percent across the board. But
for them it's the you're taking a lot of our
benefits and you're participating none. You're not becoming part of society.
We have issues here in America, and like I say,
coming here and working is one thing. If you want

(01:05:06):
to put a ring on it, though, you want to
be American and that includes respecting others cultures, yes, especially
American culture. The reason you came here is because of America.
Trying to change into an image of a place that
you couldn't wait to get away from is not something
any nation should be fine doing. And even the left

(01:05:30):
in Europe is going, yeah, we can't allow this. Let
me know what to think three two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show, is
your ex your Insta? YouTube? And more? The Danish model
of parallel society is being challenged in court in Europe.
We'll see what that looks like. But the Brits are
over there looking at this, and I understand again, this

(01:05:56):
is not about This is about culture. It's not about look,
it's not about the skin color. I mean, other people
will make it that. It is about culture and being
a part of a fabricus society. And if you expect
that society to take care of you and to give
you the opportunities of freedom and to worship the way
you want and all the things, and you do not

(01:06:17):
want to participate in that society, you just want to
take Well, guess what anybody in any nation should say.
This can't happen because eventually we will break. We will
Board Capital love Bowler Capital. They're awesome. So a week
from today three thirty Pacific six thirty East Coast time,

(01:06:37):
it is Boer Capital's review preview. So it's one week
from today, Zach Abraham's going to leave the live webinar.
They're going to talk about all kinds of things. Are
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It's huge, by the way. And then we're gonna talk
about what they do, how bullwork in the way that

(01:06:58):
they deploy their value you investing benefits, retirement portfolios and
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Investment Advisory Services off the Trick Financial LLC and sec

(01:07:41):
Research Investment Advisor. Invest involved risk not a guarantee past performance,
doesn't guarantee future results. TECK two five, three, three eight.
So Chad Benson.

Speaker 14 (01:07:47):
Show, serving up Talk radio, medium, rare and dripping with irony.

Speaker 1 (01:08:01):
It's Chad Benson and there's that.

Speaker 2 (01:08:04):
Position of the program. We're have a little bit of
fun learn about what the uts of America are saying.
What are they up to? What are some of the
vernacular And maybe as you start to learn these words,
as you start to understand what these words mean, you
too can use them in a sentence. You know what
time it is. Now, it's time for the urban word
of the day. The young have a vocabulary all their own,

(01:08:27):
and we break it down for you. It's called the
urban word of the day. All right, your urban word
of today. Remember, these can be everything from an actual
word to just letters to a phrase. Today is huzz

(01:08:47):
h u z z. It's a term for an attractive
girl or a group of girls, or someone you want
to impress. All right, you look over there and you're like, oh, huzz,
you know, like you're trying to impress them. See where
I'm going with this. Huzz is your urban word of

(01:09:08):
the day.

Speaker 1 (01:09:09):
That was the urban word of the day.

Speaker 2 (01:09:12):
Now you know it's about being impressive, isn't it? And
you know what kids? The hell are you doing? Parents?
What are you doing? I don't think toddlers need a
skincare regime.

Speaker 23 (01:09:28):
A face mask for toddlers.

Speaker 2 (01:09:30):
They are always wanting to do the things that mommy's doing.

Speaker 23 (01:09:33):
It's called Reenie and it's co founded by pretty little
liar star Shay Mitchell.

Speaker 32 (01:09:37):
We started looking at how can we make a better
products that actually parents could cause the kids.

Speaker 2 (01:09:42):
Want to try it.

Speaker 23 (01:09:43):
Their first product is this paceless yep adorned with cute
animals like a unicorn to appeal to little ones. But look,
the masks have more than sixty ingredients, including chemicals.

Speaker 2 (01:09:57):
That's not good. So a face mask for children skincare now,
of course you want to do what your parents are doing. Right,
Guys want to put on deodor when they're younger, and
they want to put the you know, the colonne. We
of course I can kind of get that. Can't you
just make one that looks and pretends but there's nothing

(01:10:18):
in it? But like, I don't know, whatever would be
non chemical, you know what I mean? Something so harmless?
I just wow, that's just nuts.

Speaker 23 (01:10:31):
And they're being marketed to kids ages three and up,
and that's getting under the skin of lots of parents.

Speaker 27 (01:10:38):
Right.

Speaker 23 (01:10:38):
Mom Karina Kerr refuses to let her daughter aroor Up
use the face mask.

Speaker 15 (01:10:43):
You do have to just remember that kids are kids,
and they're only kids for so long, and to have
them growing up so fast and wanting things that are
for you know, eighteen to twenty year olds. They're missing
out on really important developmental milestones.

Speaker 33 (01:10:56):
When you think about all the chemicals that you're in
reducing them too, you're really inviting potential problems. I want
to keep skincare for children as simple as possible.

Speaker 16 (01:11:08):
The company that makes the skincare mask tells us they
are specifically designed for children and are tested by dermatologists
to ensure safety.

Speaker 2 (01:11:17):
I'm just saying, maybe you have a little fun and
if they want to have something with, you know, little
funny animals on it, or Disney characters, whatever it is,
it doesn't have to have any kind of chemicals in it. Yes,
kids are gonna want to emulate their parents. I'm just
it's just so so weird. It's like we talk about
with the kids growing up. Like my I always tell

(01:11:38):
my my daughter's seven, I always say all the time,
I'm gonna get a squisher machine and put her back
in it so she goes back to four and five
because she grows up. You know, they do grow up
so fast. I mean, Jack, my god, I started this show,
Jack was but the wi lad it's maybe sixteen in
seven months, starts driving lessons next month. And I just

(01:12:00):
it happens, they're gonna get there. You don't need to
help them, right three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four,
twenty three at Chad Benson Show, What's your ex, Your Insta,
your YouTube, Facebook and more? A lot of good stuff
coming up in the third hour, more on obviously Epstein.

(01:12:22):
There's plenty of it out there. Let's not pretend that
there's not issues going on. Yes, the government's reopened. Uh
and you know now what, Well, you guys get back
to doing what you're supposed to do. People will go
back to flying normally and being just pissed off at
a regular day of travel, and we'll move on with it.
But there's no doubt that this Epstein, it's not a controversy.

(01:12:43):
It's a tragedy. It's a crime is hanging over this
administration and a lot of that was their own doing.
We're going to talk about that. Socialism does it have
a name problem? Talk about that as well. Can to
see the show grab the podcast our number three straight
Ahead Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:13:02):
This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:13:32):
The government is now officially urban. That would have been weird, right,
like if a brick came out and did that, Hello
on the government. It's open again. It's an honor.

Speaker 28 (01:13:44):
Now signed as incredible bill and get our country working again.

Speaker 25 (01:13:49):
President Trump signing the bills and the longest shut down
in American history, six House Democrats joining nearly every Republican
to pass it. The bill has passed, but many Democrats
still furious that deal cut by eight Senate Democrats does
nothing to address the expiring Obamacare subsidies that the.

Speaker 1 (01:14:07):
Party spent forty three days fighting for.

Speaker 2 (01:14:11):
Well, yeah, sucks, I get it. Guess what if you're
the Republicans, you own this now. As far as the fix,
they own the mess. You own the fix. That's the
way you have to spend it if you were the Republicans. Look,
they they put this in without one Republican voting for it.

(01:14:35):
They said it was going to be the cure for
all of the for lack of a better term ills
when it came to our healthcare, that this was going
to be amazing. It never lived up to any of
the hype. It cost people more money, they did not
get to keep their doctor in some cases, and at

(01:14:56):
the end of the day, putting a man on a
bullet wound, which is what this is. By throwing more
subsidies doesn't fix the underlying cause of why healthcare is
such a giant mess. It doesn't fix that. But while

(01:15:17):
they were absolutely the one who spearheaded and did this,
the reality is we have to fix it, and we
need their help to do it because we need a
bipartisan way to get this working for the American people
so they don't go broke if they have appendicitis or
a heart attack, so they can make sure that their

(01:15:40):
kids are covered in a way that is cost effective
and works for the patient. Shouldn't be that hard. They'll
make it hard. Mike Johnson was very excited about them
coming back last night. It's like, hey, we're back. It
was all their fault. Government shutdown, suck. Democrats horrible, bad,

(01:16:02):
horrible bad Democrats awful horrible bad. Politics. Politics, politics, Okay, great,
we've talked about that. Now let's get to what everybody
is talking about realistically. It's the Epstein files. I have
said that this is not going anywhere. I have said
that from the beginning. This is not going to magically

(01:16:24):
disappear because you've sent everybody on recess. Everybody go home. No,
the minute everybody got back. You knew it was going
to be a front and center and lo and behold
before they even got back and voted on to reopen
the government, it was front and center.

Speaker 34 (01:16:39):
Congresswoman Adelita Grihalva sworn in after a seven week delay,
signing on to the petition to force a vote on
the files release as her first act in Congress.

Speaker 15 (01:16:48):
I will sign the discharge petition right now to release
the Epstein files.

Speaker 34 (01:16:54):
The White House is well aware that a vote would
put Republicans in an uncomfortable position. Many the President's supporters
have previously called for their release.

Speaker 2 (01:17:03):
Yeah you think. And by supporters you mean the vice president,
you mean the FBI director, you mean everybody including the president. Yeah,
come on, now, this is an ugly situation that's getting uglier,

(01:17:29):
and the cover up is making it look worse and
worse and worse and worse. And yes, I feel like
there's a cover up. Duy, where does it go? Who
does it lead to? I don't give a rats ass.
And by the way, Republicans, if your goal is to
cover this up and you still say that you care

(01:17:51):
about kids, you don't, and we're moving on you don't, Well,
we want to protect the victims. The victims, you mean
the ones that are holding press conferences with Thomas Massey
and Rocanna. You want to protect them because it sounds
like they're ready to have their voice heard and they
don't want to be used as a shield so you

(01:18:16):
can hide what's going on.

Speaker 34 (01:18:18):
In a twenty eleven exchange with his co conspirator Glenn Maxwell,
Epstein writing the quote dog that hasn't barked is Trump,
adding one of his victims spent hours with Trump at
Epstein's home, but that Trump had never once been mentioned.
Maxwell replying, I have been thinking about that house Republicans
in the White House, Identifying the victim as Virginia Geuffrey,

(01:18:39):
who once worked at Trump's spa at mar A Lago.
Geffrey said she never saw Trump do anything inappropriate. She
died by suicide earlier this year.

Speaker 2 (01:18:49):
Which is horrible. I recognize that yesterday Caroline Levitt had
to deal with this in her you know way that
she does. I think she does fine jobs, very snarky
at times, which I appreciate a good snark, and it's
got to be tough because the spin has to be tremendous.
And as a woman knowing what happens to these young
girls and powerful men and what they did. The fact

(01:19:11):
that you can sit up there for powerful men and
bs everybody, man, that's heck good on you.

Speaker 17 (01:19:17):
I have your.

Speaker 35 (01:19:18):
Statement about the new Epstein emails that have been released
by Hels Democrats. Separate from why you believe the emails
were made public, can you address their substance? Did the
president ever spend hours at Jeffrey Epstein's house with a victim?

Speaker 11 (01:19:35):
These emails prove absolutely nothing other than the fact that
President Trump did nothing wrong. And what President Trump has
always said is that he was from Palm Beach and
so was Jeffrey Epstein.

Speaker 1 (01:19:46):
Jeffrey Epstein was a.

Speaker 11 (01:19:47):
Member at mar A Lago until President Trump kicked him
out because Jeffrey Epstein was a pedophile and he was
a creep.

Speaker 1 (01:19:54):
And this email you.

Speaker 11 (01:19:55):
Refer to with the name of a victim that was
unredacted now and has s been reported on in this room,
So I will go ahead and say it Virginia Guphrey.
And it was CBS's own reporting Wija that recently wrote
that Miss Guphrey maintained and God rest her soul, that
she maintained that there was nothing inappropriate. She ever witnessed
that President Trump was always extremely professional and friendly to her,

(01:20:19):
And so I think it's a question worth asking the
Democrat Party, and you should all go ask them after
this briefing of why they chose to redact that name
of a victim who has already publicly made statements about
her relationship with Jeffrey Epstein and is unfortunately no longer
with us.

Speaker 2 (01:20:34):
Now I'm going to let's and by the way, great spin.
First of all, you never denied the emails. But Trump
has spun this thing in so many different directions from
I barely knew him to you know, he was a member,
and they've come up with all kinds of spin. The

(01:20:55):
thing about a lie, you have to remember the lie,
you know what, You don't have to remember the truth.
Truth is easy to recall. Eli is tough, and the
cover up is growing. It is and we should be pissed,
not as taxpayers or as citizens, but as human beings,
as women, as men, as fathers and husbands, as wives

(01:21:16):
and daughters, as brothers and sisters. We should be pissed
that powerful men did horrific things to young women, and
other powerful men continue to use their power to shield responsibility.
That's why we should absolutely be pissed that we were
lied to by this administration and they continue to cover

(01:21:40):
stuff up. This is important to me because of what
I went through as a child that was horrific and awful.
That's why. And I look at this and I've said,
and I hope I'm right. I don't think Trump did anything,

(01:22:01):
but if you knew, to me, you're just as guilty.
Stop trying to make the argument. Well, you know he
tried to get them to stop, because that's in one
of the emails that he asked, you know, Delaine, to stop.
You knew how many of you out there have friends

(01:22:27):
who are trafficking young kids, young girls for sex? Probably
none of you. So would you tell, well, you know,
I'm not gonna do that kind of thing. I'm just like, dude,
you should stop. No, what a pos you are? So yeah,

(01:22:49):
I have some serious issues with this, and I have
said as more and more of this has come out,
if he pardons her, or if he really knew, I'm
done as a father, as a human being, I think

(01:23:10):
we should look at this in a much different way.
And the thought that you were going to clean up
the swamp, well, as I continue to say this over
and over again, you became the hippo in the swamp,
in the waters. And if you don't know what a
hippo does, it dominates the waters, including crushing crocodiles and
anything else the most dangerous animal in the swamp. Three two, three, five,

(01:23:33):
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show,
is your ex your Insta, YouTube, Facebook, and Morphe Misty
Show grab the podcast. Birch Gold right now. Awesome opportunity.
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(01:23:55):
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(01:24:16):
They are absolutely incredible. They're gonna treat you right, but
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details Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:24:46):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:24:49):
Now it's time to find out what's trending? What's trending?
I signed James Dean.

Speaker 36 (01:25:01):
Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Serenam.

Speaker 1 (01:25:13):
Lot Truphy.

Speaker 2 (01:25:18):
Let's find out was trending on the old intewebs on
this most festive Thursday, I'll read two weeks away from
Turkey Day. My goodness me, time flies when you're having fun.
Let's start with Yahoo Yeahooo, fifty year mortgage, Chicago Bears,

(01:25:40):
Ariana Grande, PBC resignations, What Yeah, there's resignations at the BBC.
Scott Bessen. First ever radio signal detected from interstellar Comet
three I Atlas women's college basketball team scores one hundred
and seven twenty two points in a single game Grace College.

(01:26:06):
It's scored one hundred and seventy two points. That's a
new women's record with any college. By the way, NCAA
Division one, Division two, Division three, they by the way,
they didn't win by one hundred, this one seventy two
to ninety one. The tens of people inside the arena,

(01:26:29):
I'm sure we're thrilled by that. Over to the magical
world of Google Steam Machine. That is going to be
very interesting there. This is going to be the rival
to Xbox PlayStation. It's a new console that value has

(01:26:52):
or valve has unveiled. See the way that that valve unveiled.
So this is going to be so Steam the platform.
This is going to be their console. That's very interesting. Epstein,
Epstein files FBI. The penny no longer with us, No,
we wish you the best. Penny. Paul Skeins won the

(01:27:16):
SI Jamis Winston, Virginia Guffrey, Donald Trump Sarajevo, which is
something we've talked about. Horrible And finally over to Twitter,
Ben Shapiro, h one b Visus MAGA government shutdown Tehran

(01:27:40):
Woody toy story, just a toy story thing. Just let
you guys know, Virginia Guffray, Epstein, Files, Maxwell Clinton, Paul Skeens,
all the magic things trending over there in the ex world.

(01:28:05):
The Sarajevo thing again is horrific and it's the thing
of nightmares, and it's trending in a few places. I
will tell you if you haven't heard this story. Wealthy
foreigners paid upwards of eighty thousand pounds you know, about
one hundred grand for weekends safaris to kill civilians in

(01:28:30):
Sarajevo during the war. They would become snipers shooting civilians
during the siege of Sarajevo. Italian investigators are digging deep.
It was, it is disgusting. So apparently what would happen
is gun enthusiasts and far right extremists traveled to the

(01:28:52):
war torn city with sniper rifles to pick off terrified
Bosnians for fun. Now Serbia's denied the claims, but witnesses
an Italian investigators claim there was even a price list
for targeted killings. Foreigners would pay more to shoot children
and men who were armed in uniform, which is again disgusting.

(01:29:20):
So how real is it? Well, I think it's real
enough now that they are looking at prosecuting people. They
are coming into this in a way where they feel
like they can go after and arrest some people. Now,
who's it going to be. I don't know. But if

(01:29:42):
you're paying one hundred grand for a weekend to go
hunt human beings, chances are you got a little bit
of money in power. That's why you did it, and
you had cover. But now the cover may be blown.
It's not the first time that this has been out there,
and this is not the first time this has happened.
The movie that is you know what they I guess

(01:30:04):
you know, back in the day, the hostile torture porn
they used to call it. That was based on real
life experiences of people that would pay to go to
places in Southeast Asia and do horrible things because people
are cruel and evil and the dregs of society look
to be I guess entertained in any way they can,

(01:30:25):
and when they have money and power, that's what they do.
Just disgusting. Three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four
to twenty three. At Chet Benson Shows Your Extra Ins YouTube, Facebook,
and more, a lot of stuff still to get to today.
If you miss any of the show, you know what
we say herme on you make sure you grab that podcast.
This is the Chat Benson Show, Sun Chad.

Speaker 1 (01:30:59):
Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:31:21):
Salking to a buddy of mine who works in big
democratic circles and he and I we go back and
forth about all kinds of things, and I keep telling him, right,
I don't know why I do this, but I should
charge for it. Lets me keep saying to you, you
get charged for this. I keep saying, dude, you guys
have your socialism push. You have a naming problem. It's like,

(01:31:43):
what do you mean? I said, you have a naming problem? This,
this can't be new to you. He's like, well, what
do you What are you talking about? I said, you're
democratic socialist brand. Then he's it, by the way, he's

(01:32:07):
again the naming problem. He said, yeah, well what about that?
I said, You've got it wrong. He's like, well, what
do you mean? And I said, and I said, part
of this is because growing up and spending a lot
of time and living in Europe for a long time.
I said, you're a social democrat. I go one goes, oh,
I'm a social democrat. I social not socialist. Democrat still

(01:32:37):
part of the political sphere here. A democratic socialist is
much different. The perception of that is means a production
owned by the state, authoritarianism, less freedoms. A social democrat

(01:32:57):
is somebody who values everybody, believes in capitalism, believes in
a free market, wants a robust safety net, but at
the same time doesn't want the means of production owned
by the state. You have a branding problem. And he's like, man,

(01:33:25):
that sounds you're right. I said, yeah, I said, I said,
it's not just me, man, I said, go look, go
ask a political scientist, not some yahoo here. Right, you've
got to travel the world. Because I could juggle a
soccer ball and shoot the ball pretty damn hard with
both my legs. It was all right. It was the eighties.
It's a long time ago, and that's where I got

(01:33:48):
a lot of my education. I said, go ask you know,
a political scientist. They'll tell you that one is capitalism
with a strong safety net, and the other one is
state ownership and control of major industries. So when somebody says,
Madonni's a socialist and he's a communist. They think of Maduro.

(01:34:16):
You've got to if you really want to change, you've
got to take that picture and change it to Hey,
look over here at Scandinavia. Look what they're doing there,
free markets. Talk about the fact that they are free markets.
Talk about the fact that they've got private property ownership,
they've got very low corruption. Talk about the fact that
while they work with businesses, at the same time, the

(01:34:37):
workers and the businesses are almost into partnership, and government
doesn't really have anything to do with it like we
do here because we have crony capitals. You know, want
to know why, And that's what I told my brother
the other day, that is, you know, Trump's populism side
of things doesn't work when it comes to how people

(01:35:00):
view it wants they see it in place, because what
they see is a guy who is enriching himself. That's
why Biden fell apart, because all they saw was crony capitalism.
Trump's not the first, he won't be the last. We

(01:35:20):
have corruption. I mean, I don't know if you guys
were this the government opened up yesterday, do you want
to know what one of the things that they tried
to add into the reopening of the government. Besides the
fact that they want to get rid of hemp, because boy,
I love the fact that there is this thing where

(01:35:41):
you want to make sure that everybody knows that you
need to be controlled by our government. But one of
the things they put in there that's getting bipartisan pushback
was Arctic frost. So you guys remember Arctic frost. That
was that thing that when they were spying Jack Smith,
you know, spying on the government. You know, all the
senators and everything based around January sixth, and this, that

(01:36:03):
and the other, and oh my god, they all got
their their pearls all clutched up. They wanted to add
a provision in there for something.

Speaker 33 (01:36:10):
It allows senators to sue the government if their phone
records are obtained in secret during investigations. The provision has
sparked bipartisan backlash, but it wasn't enough to.

Speaker 1 (01:36:20):
Sink the bill.

Speaker 2 (01:36:21):
Five hundred grand they want for each time that they
did that. You're not even trying anymore. Now, you're just going, wow,
we should be able to sue. What makes me laugh
as many of those people that want to be able
to sue, or the same people that sign off with
the Patriot Act all the time. We don't have a
chance to go out do their do that right, We
don't crony capitalism. They're not even pretending anymore. They're reaching

(01:36:42):
in and trying to take But as I tell my buddy,
who's a Republican kit, we all hang out where we're
all good friends, and politics is a small portion of
what we talk about. And as we were chatting, I said,
the reason Trump's populism was so great because he was
talking to the average person. Right. They care about their family,
their jobs, They care about the the you know, making

(01:37:06):
ends meet, but also having a little left over. They
talk about not having to worry about their job tomorrow.
Not having to worry takes so much stress off of
your life, especially when it comes to money and employment
and things of that nature. They're looking around and that
resonated with people the first time. The second time, Look,

(01:37:26):
let's be real, COVID through everything sideways, so I don't
even I throw COVID out in that situation, and it
resonated this last time inflation was up. Biden kept telling
what in your brill and then he says stuff that
was weird, like we beat medicare and you're like, what
allowing eleven, twelve, thirteen million people to wander across the border.
I mean, all of this stuff it was it was insane,

(01:37:50):
so it wasn't hard. Trump spoke to the people. Actions
are different, you know, it's so interesting. Again. I love
this stuff, right, I love the breaking down and dissecting
a lot of this stuff. I don't care about fluff.

(01:38:13):
You know, I don't get into the he said, she said.
You know, we play some funny stuff because it makes
us laugh, but the reality of it is that just
makes us laugh. Most of those people are you know,
they're trying to get clicks and likes, and I don't
get into the you know, was Charlie Kerre killed by
Erica Kirk and the Jews? You're like, what are you
talking about? Who says that? No? I care about the US?

(01:38:37):
I do. And that's why, you know, when people hear me,
they say, you're a libtard, which makes me laugh. You
hate Trump, which you don't. I don't hate any politician
or love any politician. Those are things that are emotions
that I deem not to give to any of them.
I think Trump has some really good ideas, but I
also think Trump, like anything else, is flawed. I think

(01:38:59):
that the left has some ideas, but you know what,
they're just as sold out and as compromised as the
right is. And that's why you see people like Mandani
rise right. You see people like that, You see people
out there that you know. Him winning wasn't a surprise, no,

(01:39:21):
because he's young, and he was reaching out to people
who feel like, Hey, I'm thirty, I vote. You don't
seem to care the fact that I've got gazillion dollars
in debt and I've got to live in a one bedroom,
one bath apartment with forty seven other people to afford it.
Here in New York, we sleep in shifts. Everybody's got

(01:39:42):
to have a job at a different time, so the
place is empty. He spoke to a lot of people,
and I get it. Do I think a lot of
his ideas are in saying yeah, because he has that
more socialist idea, not the large safety net with some
higher taxes, but the crazy will own the means of

(01:40:04):
production and will control it through government means to try
to make sure that everybody is on the same page.
Now that's totally different than social democracy. It is, and
on the right, you better figure out a way to
reach back out to people who many of MAGA and

(01:40:25):
this is what I told them. MAGA won. Yes because
of the you know, the economy stupid, but also because
of social issues. Social issues played a huge role. You
can't tell a family with a kid, right who's got

(01:40:45):
a thirteen or fourteen year little girl, that this fourteen
little boy is a girl and you just better deal
with it or else and expect everybody go that sounds good.
You can't. You can't allow activists to run all of
your campaign out of fear that one tenth of one
percent is going to turn on you. And I tell
my buddies on the right, you can't allow crony capitalism

(01:41:09):
to dominate where you're throwing the Great Gatsby parties again.
Perception look plays a big role. Well, everybody else is
struggling out there and saying I'm for the working man.
It is amazing how tone deaf both sides are, and

(01:41:30):
they are they're tone deaf, you know, being out here
in Nashville. You know, I mean, I always joke about
we're like we're on the we're the buckle of the belt.
And people will send stuff to me all the time
about how horrible.

Speaker 18 (01:41:46):
I am.

Speaker 2 (01:41:47):
Here's a perfect example of insanity here that I have
to deal with the times. And I love the people.
They're passionate. But I said to we were talking the
every day about Christmas vacation, and then somehow, somehow we
got onto because we're talking about when Jack was going
to come out here and see me, so my buddy
can and Bell, my local producer and everything. We're talking
about all this stuff, and we got onto Easter vacation

(01:42:10):
because I said, he comes out here for then, and
he goes, you got off at Easter. That's what Ken said.
Kenn lived in Oklahoma. I said, yeah, we got off
for a week at Easter. And he goes, we didn't
get that. And somebody said to me, that's because you're
a pagan. I said, what the hell are you talking about.
Somebody texts me you're a pagan because you had Easter
week off for Easter. I said, well, first of all,

(01:42:30):
I went to a school that had a week off.
It wasn't like I chose it, because if it was
up to me, i'd give myself. I don't know, fifty
two weeks off. But that's neither here nor there. What
are you talking about right. So I get it from
all sides all the time. But I asked that person,
when's the last time you know? Because later on we

(01:42:52):
got into some about Trump and they said, well, you're
a libtard and you hate Trump and you have Trump
arrangement syndrome, et cetera, et cetera, And was the last
time he talked to a Democrat? I would never talk
to a Democrat because they're of you know, they're evil
and they're bad. And for my friends out there on
the left, I said, when the last time you talked
to a Republican somebody who voted for Trump, somebody who
thinks different. Well, I would never do that, so why not?

(01:43:14):
It's the beauty of our country man being able to
sit down and talk the stuff that binds us and
the exhaust majority which we are, the stuff that binds
us is so much stronger than the minutia. They want
us fighting with each other. That's how they succeed. They
use emotion and fear to get us to make choices

(01:43:35):
at times, the lesser of two evils, which is just
a lesser evil. We've got to do better. We do,
we do, and I get frustrated, you guys hear that
all the time, man, because I look around and I think,
could we solve healthcare? Absolutely, there's a common sense way

(01:43:58):
of going about doing this. But crony capitalism, no doubt.
Do we have an issue with immigration one hundred percent?
Was it fixed by Trump? You bet your candy ass.
Are we having issues with deportations of the way some
of the stuff's been handled? Yeah, But you know what,
I blame the Democrats for that. You've allowed how many
people to come in here and what ended up happening.

(01:44:19):
You won't even work with our own government to get
the bad ones out because you feel if you do
that somehow what you're racist again. You're allowing activists to
drive a narrative that shouldn't be there. There's so many
comments then things to get left out. But as we've
talked about and we will continue to do so, nuance, conversation,

(01:44:43):
data and facts are much harder to sift through to
get a true opinion and understanding of something to make
a decision than just trying to scare the hell out
of somebody. Three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four
to twenty three atch had been to show is your
ext your instant YouTube we're more. We're gonna wrap it
up straight ed. Prize picks. Let me tell you some

(01:45:05):
about prize picks. Well, game tonight, if you know what
I mean, a little football game tonight. What should we do?
Let's take a look at our prize pick. So let
me take you about prize picks. It's America's number one.
No motro who, no fantasy sports app. You choose players,
not teams. Okay, so use players not teams, based on
their projected stats. So we got a little fur game tonight,

(01:45:25):
Drake May against the Jets. Do I believe that Drake
May will have more than two hundred and thirty eight
and a half passing yards?

Speaker 4 (01:45:34):
I do.

Speaker 2 (01:45:36):
It's more or less. Now to set another portion, you
gotta have two or more for a lineup. You got
to pick somebody else. It could be from any sport.
But let's just say tonight because I'm gonna do that
with Drake May. What about Oh, I don't know, Breeze Hall.
Do I think he's gonna have more than fifty seven
and a half rushing yards tonight? I don't. Actually, So
we got it more. We got a less more being

(01:45:57):
Drake May. That's it less being Reese Hall. There you go.
I've made my lineup in a way. I go. Now,
when you download the app, use my CoA chat and
you make a lineup again any sport more or less.
What happens. You get fifty dollars instantly, we play first
five dollars lineup. What It's that simple? So what are
you waiting for? Download the app, use my co chad,
get fifty dollars instantly in lineups into your account when

(01:46:19):
you play a first five dollars lineup and start to
win and start to have fun today with prize picks,
prize picks. It's good to be right. Wrap it up
straight to Ed Chad Benson.

Speaker 32 (01:46:26):
Joe, hashtag me too, hashtag immigration reforms, hashtag help. I'm
trapped in a hashtag factory and I can't get out
the chat Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:46:47):
I have to be honest with you. When I saw
this the other day on a couple of my feeds,
I thought, there's no way this is real because it
has to be AI. But it's not. It's absolutely real,
and it's insane. It's the Housekeeping Olympics on your Mark,
Get set Clean.

Speaker 23 (01:47:04):
It's the Housekeeping Olympics teams from the most popular hotels
in Las Vegas battle it out in the annual event.
Bed making is a favorite. These ladies and gentlemen can
make a bed in near seconds. The team from Resorts
World took the top prize.

Speaker 2 (01:47:22):
The Housekeeping Olympics. Honest to god, I thought it was
I thought it was vague at least, no way this
is real. There's no way this is real. But sure
enough they're out there and they're on like a you know,
it's like at an arena, and they've got bed set
up in the middle of it, and there's like a giant,
huge table by each bed, you know, one of the

(01:47:43):
standing tables, and has all the stuff on there so
you can get yourself going and just start making stuff.
And a way they go.

Speaker 23 (01:47:49):
These guys are trying to clean up in the mopping
obstacle course, and look at the competition for vacuuming skills. Hey,
you missed a spot. And what the heck is going
on here?

Speaker 2 (01:48:01):
Why?

Speaker 23 (01:48:02):
It's the buffer pad toss. Of course, those pads are
used to shine up the miles of marble flooring all
over Sin City. Someone added a music from Chariots of
Fire to this highlight reel. Perfect team snag trophies and
gold medals, but mostly it's about bragging rates for the

(01:48:24):
hardest working folks in Las Vegas.

Speaker 2 (01:48:28):
So who won aria Vedara? They won the housekeeping Olymics,
with Resort World and Staples Business finishing in second. Third place,
respectively went to Neticens. Having shared warm and encouraging comments
on X one, commenter said Awesome celebrated the people who
keep the world spinning a oh my goodness three two, three, five, three, eight,

(01:48:53):
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson chow is
your ex, your Insta, your YouTube, Facebook, and or I
do love hearing from all of you guys. And remember
you can leave a voice message on the text line
as well as texting the program. Tomorrow's gonna be fun.
We've got a lot of good stuff tomorrow. Buddy Zach
Abram's gonna join us, well as Jim Kennedy a lot

(01:49:13):
of other good stuff as well. And tonight we're gonna
be live right around seven o'clock Eastern. Again, we're playing
around with the times when it comes to YouTube, So
if you have a chance, check us out tonight. We're
gonna go live right around seven o'clock eisn a lot
of stuff about AI we'll talk about tonight. Have a blessed,
have an amazing, have an incredible rest of your gold

(01:49:33):
on a second. I see you Friday. I have a
great rest of your Thursday, we'll do it and tomorrow.
As always, Night night Jack.

Speaker 1 (01:49:41):
This is the Chad Benson Show.
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