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May 5, 2025 • 60 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello friends, you have a moment so that we may
discuss our Lord and Savior minarkey, No, seriously, I'm just kidding. Hi.
My name is Rick Robinson. I am the general manager
of Klrnradio dot com. We are probably the largest independent
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(00:20):
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(00:42):
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out anytime you like at klr I'm.

Speaker 2 (00:57):
Jordan Klinger, an attorney at McIntyre Law. Poscision to hire
an attorney after you've been injured is important. The decision
on who to hire is even more important. At McIntyre Law,
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(01:20):
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Speaker 4 (01:56):
Hi everyone, this is JJ, the co founder of good Pods.
If you haven't heard of it yet, Good Pods is
like good Reads or Instagram, but for podcasts.

Speaker 1 (02:05):
It's social.

Speaker 4 (02:06):
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Speaker 5 (02:30):
The following program contains course language and adult themes. Listener
and discretion is advised.

Speaker 1 (02:39):
It's time now for the Conservative Curmudgeon radio show. Now
here's grouchy.

Speaker 6 (03:23):
Good evening, everybody. It's good to be back sort of. Anyway,
you're gonna hear me sipping on my drink frequently to
get through this. It's gonna be okay.

Speaker 1 (03:36):
Wait, hang on, I thought we were supposed to have
the conservative conservative curmudgeon, not Froggy from Little Rascal.

Speaker 6 (03:45):
Ah, all right, A little better here.

Speaker 1 (03:49):
You should you should start talking backwards like Yoda would
fit right now.

Speaker 6 (03:53):
I don't uh. The drinking really helps, but I can't
drink and talk.

Speaker 1 (04:04):
That's from Mayberry said all the time too. A dude.
I thought my allergies were kicking my ass today. I
was like struggling to get through the last hour and
then you start talking, and I'm like, dude, I.

Speaker 6 (04:18):
Should have let you look when I tell you that
I had no voice, I mean I had no voice.
Oh anyway, we're commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of the fall

(04:40):
of Saigon.

Speaker 1 (04:43):
You mean the war that we could have actually won.

Speaker 6 (04:45):
If the meeting we could have mentioned this because my
father was a marine veteran of Vietnam, and it's just
something that very seldom got.

Speaker 1 (05:05):
Ooh, the amsters got mad early tonight. They must not
like what you're talking about. Waiting for you to come
back in three what's that we lost? You like thirty
seconds already?

Speaker 6 (05:17):
Weird. Usually it bobs up and down on me and
I see it as I'm preparing some things out in
the living room, and I'll know that it's going to
be a rough night. But it didn't do that to
me while I was out there. I thought I might
be getting lucky. But uh no, screw me hat again.

Speaker 1 (05:38):
Oh man.

Speaker 6 (05:41):
Anyway, fifty years since the fall of Saigon, not since
the war, which happened well before that. But yeah, I
just I would I wouldn't courage folks to, you know,

(06:03):
do some reading, do some you know, go back and
do some homework. I know we all got it in
history class growing up. I know gen xers did. I
don't know what they teach anymore. I don't know, if
Vietnam is in the history curriculum any longer, most of.

Speaker 1 (06:22):
Them don't even have a history curriculum anymore.

Speaker 6 (06:24):
That too, Yeah, yeah, really, I mean, but proud, proud
of my dad for what he did, always have been.
He uh, he felt a little bit of the burning

(06:45):
coming back. You know. It wasn't everybody, but there were
plenty in this country that that didn't care for our
presence over there and took it out on the servicemen.
And that's the wrong way to go. That's the wrong
way to go. Those those young they were boys that
literally they were boys. They were they were like World

(07:06):
War two in Korea. They were boys. Oh and uh
to to put all that on them instead of the
people in charge, it's just the wrong thing. Mh. So

(07:26):
shout out to Dad and to all the Vietnam vets
out there. Oh listen to that that drink that one
did good. Wow. Anyway, Yeah, just just wanted to touch
on that, and uh, you know, it's it's an important thing.
It registers in my life even though my dad's gone now,

(07:50):
but it's still one of those things that I ever
remember seeing on TV as a kid. We remember not
just from history, so.

Speaker 1 (08:14):
There was well, hang on, before we go too much further.
One of the weirdest one of the weirdest things for
me about that though, is like the historical overlap, because
not only is this like the fiftieth anniversary of the
fall of Sygon, this is also the anniversary of Adolf
Hitler committing suicide, which I find really weird. How many
important things seem to happen on this day.

Speaker 6 (08:34):
That is weird. I didn't realize that. Wow, did not
realize that at all. That's uh, that's pretty wild. There
was something else too that was fairly significant, maybe more
recent in history, but but there's a there's a great

(09:03):
commemorative on CBS News for all the things that they
do wrong.

Speaker 1 (09:12):
And while we're waiting on you to come back, as
it seems to be super cranky tonight, the most recent
thing I can find in history was two thousand and
four April thirty, two thousand and four, which was when
the Abo Grade prison abuse scandal broke. Am I back now, yep,
you're back now?

Speaker 6 (09:28):
Okay, So yeah, CBS News they did their story with
there a sergeant that was there and Saigon on the
rooftop as the helicopters were leaving, and oddly enough, with

(09:49):
all the hubbub of immigration going on right now, Sergeant
Juan Valdez, right.

Speaker 1 (10:00):
The coffee guy was a sergeant.

Speaker 6 (10:04):
You know, it could be him because it says he's
now eighty seven years old and living in a memory
care unit. But he he was. He was literally the
last one.

Speaker 1 (10:25):
Duo dooo doo doo doo doo dooo doooo doo dudooo.

Speaker 6 (10:35):
I am not.

Speaker 1 (10:35):
Don't talk about it.

Speaker 6 (10:39):
So how much did we miss uh, let's see, he's
eighty seven.

Speaker 1 (10:43):
Yeah, eighty seven memory care unit was about where we
lost you.

Speaker 6 (10:45):
Okay. He he actually piled all the people into the
last helicopter and then boarded himself, and that was the
last American helicopter out of Saigon. So he was literally
the last. And they did their story with him, along

(11:06):
with some others. But it's it's a really nice piece,
and it it gives you an idea of what a
lot of these servicemen had going on in their lives.
You know, a nineteen year old ordered to lower the
American flag the last time the American flag was going

(11:28):
to fly over Vietnam.

Speaker 1 (11:33):
And and since we've lost you again, here's another little
interesting side note about April thirtieth. This was the day
that George Washington was inaugurated for the first time. And
he's back.

Speaker 6 (11:48):
Now, that's awesome. He's my favorite, you know.

Speaker 1 (11:51):
So yeah, he's pretty much my favorite too.

Speaker 6 (11:57):
And I know I've mentioned this probably one hundred times,
but you know the Mel Gibson movie The Patriot, that
that character was loosely based on Washington the battle tactics,
and it just Washington was not given enough credit for
being a vicious sob on the battlefield, and he truly was.

Speaker 1 (12:22):
I mean, well, he was exactly what it needed to
be because if not for him being the vicious sob
that he actually was to his enemies, we wouldn't be
here today. If we were, we'd probably have British accentors and.

Speaker 6 (12:33):
Really bad teeth. Yep, I get it.

Speaker 1 (12:45):
Yeah. I was watching Designated Survivor the other day and
they were they had one of the pictures of Washington
up there and they were like, and it was when
he was doing one of the tours with the kids,
and they were like, why why didn't he smile? And
he was like, well, I'm pretty sure if you had
wooden't teth you wouldn't smile fading of your pictures.

Speaker 6 (13:01):
Yeah, that's pretty fair.

Speaker 1 (13:06):
That was a good response.

Speaker 6 (13:08):
Yeah yeah, oh man, So, uh what else is going on?
You know again, CBS News, great story. Go check it out,
do yourself that favor. It's it's it's touching, it's moving,
and it's historically accurate. So yes, it really is, it

(13:31):
really is. Yeah, considering that's the home of Dan Rather, So.

Speaker 1 (13:38):
I remember when I used to look up to that. Man.

Speaker 6 (13:40):
God, you know, I just I you know, I remember
Cronkite as a little kid. I remember Kronkite's last broadcast.
Dan Rather and and Tom Brokaw were the big names,

(14:05):
and then Peter Jennings came along. And I remember Peter
Jennings because man, he'd fire up a heater right there
on TV. I thought that was the coolest. Shit. Are
you smoking while you're doing the news? Why? Hell? Yes,
I am. So.

Speaker 1 (14:27):
This one is one I talked about on my own
show today. But I kind of feel like this is
kind of a bit of a Mandela effect, because you know,
how much of a history nerd I am. I have
no memory of TV being even talked about as early
as apparently it was in history so apparently, on April thirtieth,
nineteen thirty nine, the New York's World Fair opened with

(14:48):
President Franklin D. Roosevelt's appearance, marking the start of regular
television broadcasting in the US all the way back in
thirty nine.

Speaker 6 (14:56):
Really, I was unaware of thirty nine being the.

Speaker 1 (15:00):
I remember Roosevelt was like the first one, but I
could have swore it was later. That's kind of throwing
me off a bit because I'm like, that seems awfully
early for television.

Speaker 6 (15:10):
Yeah, so too. I don't know what do I know though,
I'm just an idiot with a podcast.

Speaker 1 (15:20):
And then we became a commercial nation in nineteen fifty two,
officially because the Mister potato Head became the first totally
advertised on television marketed directly to children, selling over one
million units in its first year.

Speaker 6 (15:31):
And now there's over a million of them just on.

Speaker 1 (15:34):
Twitter and one that used to play on CNN.

Speaker 6 (15:39):
Fucking potato heads. Yeah that's tater Head there.

Speaker 1 (15:47):
Oh, So I thought I lost it, but I think
you're there. Maybe I heard a squeak, so I thought
you were still there. Yeah you're back now, not that
kind of.

Speaker 6 (16:06):
Yeah, yeah, don't do that anymore.

Speaker 1 (16:09):
Yeah, don't do that. You'll start talking backwards like yoda.
So it sounds normal again.

Speaker 6 (16:13):
So the Senate passed a joint resolution to repeal a
Department of Energy Appliance standard by a fifty two to
forty six margin, advancing the rollback of Biden era green
energy regulations on household appliances. Yes, the start finally fixed
my fucking shower head. A Republican Georgia Representative Andrew Clyde

(16:41):
is the lead sponsor of the Joint Resolution of Disapproval
hj RES forty two, which aims to nullify a rule
by the DOE on October ninth of twenty four under
President Joe Biden which added new efficiency and reporting Senator

(17:12):
John House where it passed on March fifth on a
bipartisan vote. Bipartisan Even Democrats are against this crap. It's
important that my first bill go to the President's desk
eliminating regulations for the American people instead of adding to them.

(17:34):
Republican Ohio Senator Husted said, let's see calls the bill
a bureaucratic, out of touch, overregulated, making it harder for
taxpayers to afford appliances. This resolution would cut red tape

(17:56):
for manufacturers, restore consumer choice and or costs for hardworking
Americans across the country. Right on, Just get my damn
shower head back to four gallons a minute, right, you
know some of us need that, And being half white,

(18:17):
I have this ethnic hair and it's really hard to
get wet and thoroughly wet me. Husted's effort would rescind
the new requirements for twenty household and commercial products, including dishwashers,

(18:40):
central air conditioning units, water pumps, heat pumps, and more
water pumps. Water heaters. Yeah, heat pumps and more heat pump. Man,
if you live in the South, the heat pump is
a god send. I just, I'm serious. It's it's been

(19:05):
mid to upper eighties here for the last three weeks,
and my power bill just came in running the air
conditioner at sixty eight degrees, So it's it's on a lot.
You can imagine, our lows are already above sixty eight
degrees at night here, so the air runs a lot.

(19:27):
And my power bill was one hundred and seventy eight dollars.
I just, you know, I don't know what else to say.
I just.

Speaker 1 (19:39):
And you start bragging about your electric billion Internet cuts
out again. Ah a karma, Well you probably should, but
I know you. I know your options are limited because
I feel I feel your pain because before I got

(19:59):
fiber optics, and I mean, mine still doesn't work the
way I would like, Like I still have to reset
my router usually like twice a day. But I live
on the internet, so I figure that's just part of
them trying to force me to go into the bigger package,
right probably.

Speaker 6 (20:11):
And I I mean, when mine's working, my downstream, I
pay for six hundred megabits, but my downstream clocks at
usually around nine hundred to nine fifty. So I mean
it's hard to complain because I get more than I

(20:33):
pay for when it's working. You just don't always know
when it's going to be working.

Speaker 1 (20:40):
And occasionally it just says, yeah, no, I'm going to
fold in the day. Hope you don't mind.

Speaker 6 (20:43):
Yeah yeah, but uh, and when it works, it works.

Speaker 1 (20:50):
And when it don't, it don't. Kind of like right now.

Speaker 6 (21:00):
So anyway, Hustin continued ice story. Power should be used judiciously,
and it's why they're committed to eliminating rules that impose
unjustified burdens. Oh. According to Senate Majority Leader John Thune.

(21:21):
Sometimes I just wonder these leadership positions, you know, is
it like they have to go in a room and
draw straws to see who's going to take them?

Speaker 1 (21:34):
Sometimes I think they have to because I think I
don't think there's a lot of people that really want
the leadership positions anymore. So I think it turns into
this drawing straws kind of thing.

Speaker 6 (21:41):
Because yeah, because you know, like Mike Lee and Ran
Paul and they were like, nope, nope, nope.

Speaker 1 (21:49):
You know, not doing it, just not going to do it.
But I don't really blame them though, right.

Speaker 6 (22:05):
What you are for a reason use it?

Speaker 1 (22:10):
Yeah, but that would make too much sense though too.

Speaker 6 (22:12):
Yeah. I mean I'm just a jackass with podcasts. So anyway, So,
over the last four years, the Biden administration subjected Americans
to an onslaught of regulations. Altogether, the Biden regulatory agenda

(22:33):
cost one point eight trillion dollars, heaped thousands of hours
of paperwork on business owners, energy producers, and other hardworking Americans.
And to what end, and I'm quoting here, I am
here by instructing Secretary Lee Zelden to immediately go back

(22:57):
to my environmental orders which were terminated by Crooked Joe
Biden on water standards and flow pertaining to sinks, to
the Common Sense Standards on Life by the Trump administration

(23:20):
but terminated by Crooked Joe. President Donald Trump wrote that
quote on truth social media on February eleventh, and then
he said, I look forward to signing these orders. Thank you.
So you know, for what it's worth. Hopefully that means

(23:47):
good shower heads are.

Speaker 1 (23:48):
Coming or good head in the shower.

Speaker 6 (23:52):
Take you speaking, Just don't let her drown, you know,
put your back to the shower, so you know. Ah, God,
t feels good going down. Should have port some whiskey

(24:16):
in it. Anyway, Man, I don't know what can we
kill for a few minutes. So I don't want to
start this story before the before the break.

Speaker 1 (24:29):
Ah. I mean, I don't know what we're you gonna
talk about? El see if I can find something else.

Speaker 6 (24:33):
Well, I was going to talk about judges that seem
to want to go to jail.

Speaker 1 (24:39):
Okay, Well, I don't know if you've heard about this,
but did you know Scott Jennings has just dropped a
pretty major hint about what his future is and it
may not be CNN, So yeah, CNN. Scott Jennings, the
bane of leftist punditry on the on the network CNN
otherwise known as common as News Network, is reportedly considering

(25:00):
a run for the Senate. Jennings, a former GOP strategist,
has become a rock star of sports on the right,
with many right leaning outlets regularly featuring his many brutal
takedowns of his leftist counterparts.

Speaker 6 (25:13):
He's from Kentucky, right, I think, so running for a
McConnell's seat.

Speaker 1 (25:19):
Let's see, but he could be looking to become Kentucky's
next senator after Senator Mitch McConnell rides off into the sunset.
So that could be awesome. I mean, having a firebrand
like him, even being in the junior junior senator that
that could be good for Kentucky. I'm not gonna.

Speaker 6 (25:39):
Is it. I mean that would be quite a pay
cut for.

Speaker 1 (25:41):
Him, yeah, but usually worth it, usually but usually how rock.

Speaker 6 (25:50):
I would love to see him in the Senate.

Speaker 1 (25:55):
Oh so hang on, just just for funds, as we've
got some time to kill. Let's play this clip I
just saw because I forgot about this one and it
was on my It was on my cutting room for
from the day. I may actually still run it on
mine tomorrow, but just for fun. He's mercurial.

Speaker 4 (26:09):
Honestly, if I was Kamala Harris behaving this way, they'd
call her hormonal and hysterical.

Speaker 1 (26:14):
Right, Look, we'd have to get elected to be but well, yes,
and if she had been elected, and she and Hillary
Clinton have been elected, if any woman had been elected
and been called been acting this way, they'd say it
was MetOp She would have never stood up to China.
So this is a mood issue, right, No, it's I
love that man. Did I mention that man?

Speaker 6 (26:34):
So?

Speaker 1 (26:34):
Anyway, that was Anna Navarro basically saying that if if
a female president was acting this way, everybody would be
calling her hormonal. But wouldn't wouldn't wouldn't she be by
default being hormonal?

Speaker 6 (26:50):
You know, I don't. I don't know at Hillary's uh
stage of evolution what hormones are left? But functions, Oh
well there.

Speaker 1 (27:03):
I mean, there's there's a reason that old billy boys
looking more and more like the cripkeeper every day.

Speaker 6 (27:08):
There is there is I think the h the deal
for his soul is coming due.

Speaker 1 (27:17):
Apparently, because dude, I am. I mean, you know, if
if you ever wanted to draw a parallel between American
politics and the Empire from Star Wars, you need to
look no further than Emperor Palpatine in Bilklin. Holy ship.
Look at those two side by side. That's bad. That's bad.

Speaker 6 (27:41):
And just look look at Hillary and through you.

Speaker 1 (27:45):
Well, there's a reason he had people. He had chicks
hiding under the desk.

Speaker 6 (27:49):
I'm just like, yeah, to get ahead. Yeah. They weren't
there to take the cigars.

Speaker 1 (28:03):
Oh, they were trying to think something off his cigar.
So did you so you heard about the new damn
idiot trying to do the whole impeachment thing, you know,
like Bollywood like guy. Yeah, so yeah, funny thing about
that guy. Apparently he has a he has a fauci

(28:26):
like history.

Speaker 6 (28:27):
So apparently I read that yesterday.

Speaker 1 (28:30):
I was reading the other day like, holy crap, dude, dude,
but dude was doing like unethical research on Snoopy for
God's sake.

Speaker 6 (28:37):
Yeah, and then we shut the whole place down and
left all the animals to die.

Speaker 1 (28:42):
Yeah, And you know, and people that were like the
caregivers of the animals were like climbing over vinces and
stuff to make sure they were okay until arrangements could
be made. So luckily a lot of them didn't die.
But still i'mlike, I want to impeach that guy.

Speaker 6 (28:57):
How do we do that? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (29:00):
I'm not a huge dog guy, but that's bullshit. My
kids love dogs. I'm not a big pet guy. I
haven't been since I was a kid. Watching two or
three of my favorite animals in the world get hit
by a car. It was kind of enough for me.
It happens, and a few times I've gotten attached to
dogs and having to watch them cross the Rainbow bridge.
I just I don't like going through that anymore. So

(29:22):
my kids love dogs. I am not a dog person,
but I will still stab a bitch over doing bad
things to Snoopy.

Speaker 6 (29:28):
Yeah, yes, absolutely, I'm right there too.

Speaker 1 (29:36):
All right, believe it or not, my friend, we've hit
the bottom of the hour. You want to ahead and
take the break.

Speaker 6 (29:40):
Yeah, let's take a break. I can go refill my drink.

Speaker 1 (29:47):
All right, folks, you are listening to the conservative communcial
radio show live on Kaylauren Radio. He does this thing
usually every Wednesday, except for the second one. You talk
to masculinity that night, But we'll be back. Stay tuned
you or don't, But if you don't, he'll confine you.

(30:25):
You are listening to k l R and Radio where
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Speaker 2 (32:07):
I'm Jordan Klinger, an attorney at McIntyre Law. The decision
to hire an attorney after you've been injured is important.
The decision on who to hire is even more important.
At McIntyre Law, we will settle a case if the
offer to our client is fair. Partial justice is no
justice at all. At McIntyre Law, we are committed to
obtaining full justice for our clients. Contact McIntyre Law at

(32:29):
four zero five nine one seven fifty two hundred or
visit us at mcintyrelaw dot com.

Speaker 3 (32:36):
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your auto loan? Could it be that you might have
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(32:57):
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Speaker 4 (33:07):
Hi everyone, this is JJ, the co founder of good Pods.
If you haven't heard of it yet. Good Pods is
like good Reads or Instagram, but for podcasts like mine
social it's different and it's growing really fast. There are
more than two million podcasts, and we know that it
is impossible to figure out what to listen to. Listeney
as you follow your friends and podcasters to see what

(33:29):
they like. That is the one way to discover new
shows and episodes. You can find Good Pods on the
web or download the app Happy Listening to Me.

Speaker 5 (33:40):
The following program contains course language and adult themes. Listener
and discretion is advised.

Speaker 6 (34:00):
All right, welcome back. I sound a little better. I
hit the nose spray, I hit the throat spray. I
got my drink refilled. Everything's good, good, everything is yeas.

Speaker 1 (34:15):
Oh wait, sorry except your Internet because I think I
lost you again. There wait, maybe not are you there?
Think you're there? Think you're back?

Speaker 6 (34:25):
Okay, okay, damn it.

Speaker 1 (34:28):
Media Comah might want to start doing a reset on
the show nights, just to.

Speaker 6 (34:34):
See if I will, yeah, just to see if it makes.

Speaker 1 (34:36):
A difference, because I have to do that a lot
otherwise I lose shit. It's just like, yeah, it'll be
acting fine one minute and it's just begne the next.
In It's weird. It's like this whole cascade tell your
thing because I can. I can still stream and everybody
can see me and everybody can hear me. But all
of a sudden, I start trying to pull up my
notes and this page cannot be displayed. I'm like, how
the hell am I not connected to the internet while

(34:57):
I'm actually actually actively streaming to the internet.

Speaker 6 (34:59):
It's really, Yeah, that is weird. So they say, you know,
birds of a feather flock together, and I don't know
how should make sense of or explain how two unrelated
state court judges over one thousand miles apart and seven
years apart, broke federal law by.

Speaker 1 (35:26):
I'm sorry, they broke federal law by doing what again?
Because we lost you again?

Speaker 6 (35:32):
So we broke federal law by acting's evade captured by
federal agents who had all of the necessary immigration paperwork
to detain or remove them. From the United States. Hang on,
hang on, Yeah, we should definitely get the clip from

(35:56):
the song though, gets I guess some judas priest on here.

Speaker 1 (36:04):
Uh.

Speaker 6 (36:04):
Anyway, the facts of their cases are eerily similar, forcing
you to ask yourself, the hell are they thinking? They weren't,
I mean, they were thinking something, and especially this one.
In this Hannah Dugan, she already knows that they prosecuted

(36:29):
the other judge for doing the exact same thing. Now
part of the Shedugan has already been relieved of her

(36:50):
official duties by the Wisconsin State Supreme Court, prohibited from
exercising the powers of a circuit court judge, while joe'oseph
has pending formal charges filed against her by the Massachusetts
Commission on Judicial Conduct for serious ethical and legal violations.

(37:12):
In twenty eighteen, Judge Shelley Joseph was charged by the
United States Justice Department for conspiring with her bailiff to
set an illegal alien free from her courtroom. Hoosei Medina
Perez was a twice deported illegal alien whom the Newton,
Massachusetts Police arrested on charges of narcotics possession and being

(37:37):
a fugitive from Pennsylvania. US Immigration and Customs Enforcement issued
a federal immigration detainer warrant on him that was forwarded police.

(37:58):
Pretty eighteen Joseph called old Medina Perez's ordered the ICE
agent present out of her courtroom, stating that if the
defendant was released, he would be released into the lobby
of the courthouse. The ICE agent exited the courtroom and
waited in the lobby. Instead the Pennsylvania fugitive warrant. Whoa,

(38:20):
we missed a paragrapher a page here, Seymour. So basically
he didn't get released to the lobby. He got released
through the judges chambers and out the back door of
the courthouse. Well, I'll cover what Seymour missed, shame boy.

(38:42):
So instead the Pennsylvania fugitive warrant was dismissed. The illegal
alien was released on his own. Well, yeah, on his own,
and the judge told her bailiff to use his security
access card YadA, YadA, YadA, when the federal grand jury
indicted her and her bailiff for obstruction of just for

(39:06):
the District of Massachusetts Andrew Lellens Court can't pick and choose.
The federal use our personal views to justify violating the law.
See When you see a judge do something like this,
it calls in to question the integrity that they used

(39:27):
in every case that's ever come before them, and you
have to wonder when did they abuse their powers or
when did they not abuse their powers. It creates a
huge problem. You're talking about the possibility of anybody that's
ever been in front of her receiving a new trial

(39:51):
or possibly a straight out acquittal and release. The US
Court of Appeals for the First Circuit rejected Joseph's claim
that as a state judge, she was somehow immune from
prosecution by the FEDS the prosecution law.

Speaker 1 (40:13):
Oh wait, sorry, I think I scared your internet first edission?

Speaker 6 (40:24):
Damn did it go out again?

Speaker 1 (40:26):
Now you're back. Now submit yourself to the State Mission
when you came back.

Speaker 6 (40:29):
Oh yeah, State Commission on Judicial Misconduct, which has filed
formal charges against her after its investigation found that she
had violated multiple laws and the Judicial Code of Conduct.
Fast forward to twenty twenty five and the copycat case
of State Judge Hannah Dugan, another previously deported illegal alien

(40:53):
who re entered the country. According to the FBI complaint,
Eduardo Flores Ruise entered the US illegally and was deported
back to Mexico in twenty thirteen. On March eighteenth of
twenty five, Flores Ruise was charged in Milwaukee with three

(41:14):
counts of domestic battery, abuse and infliction of physical pain
or injury. Alerted to his arrest, six federal agents planned
to arrest him after his first appearance in the local
court the sixth, consisting of an ice officer, a cb
P officer to FBI, and two DEA agents dressed in

(41:37):
plain clothes to conduct the courthouse arrest in a safe
and low key manner. They identified themselves to a court
security guard and explained the purpose of their visit. The
guards supervisor asked them to wait to arrest Flores Ruise
until after his appearance in court Room six point fifteen

(41:58):
was completed. They agreed and then proceeded to Dougan's courtroom.
Once there, the two FBI agents advised the courtroom deputy
that they were there to arrest him after his court appearance.
While they were waiting outside the courtroom, Flora's Ruise's public
defender took photos of the arrest team, minus a DEA

(42:22):
agent who was not seated with them. When Dougan was
informed that Ice agents were in the hallway waiting to
arrest Flora's Ruise. She blurted out that was quote unquote absurd,
left the bench and with another unnamed judge, angrily confronted
the agents in the hallway. She told them they needed

(42:43):
to leave the courthouse. Oh wow, yeah, no Whendugan was
informed that they were there to effectuate an arrest. She
asked if they had a judicial warrant. An agent politely
and informed her that he had an administrative warrant, to
which Dugan stated incorrectly that he needed a judicial warrant.

(43:08):
The agent offered to show the warrant to the judge,
but instead she ordered the agents to speak to the
Chief Judge, demanding their report to his office. Dugan even
escorted the arrest team to the reception area of the
Chief Judge's office, not knowing that one agent remained behind
outside her courtroom. Dugan then went back to her courtroom,

(43:34):
but not before she looked down the hallway for additional agents.
Dugan then escorted Flores Ruis and his lawyer out of
the courtroom through the jury door, a secure door only
used for deputies, jury's court staff. And in custody defendants
being escorted by deputies. She returned to her courtroom conducted

(43:58):
hearings in other cases on the morning's docket, never telling
the prosecutor or the victims in flores Ruiz's case, who
were in the courtroom the whole time, that the case
had secretly adjourned with no public announcement. Fortunately, despite Dugan's

(44:20):
attempt to help flores Ruiz escape federal agents, there were
more agents waiting outside the courthouse that were able to
identify and capture him about a block from the courthouse
after he started running away, so she just flat cut
him loose. Dugan was arrested after the FBI filed a

(44:45):
criminal complaint against her for violating US Code eighteen sections
fifteen oh five and ten seventy one. The former makes
it a federal crime to obstruct a proceeding before a
department or agency, while the latter makes it a federal
crime to conceal a person from arrest. Both crimes are
punishable by a maximum five years in prison. The case

(45:11):
will now be evaluated by the local US attorney, who
will decide whether to present the case to a federal
grand jury for indictment. As one of us has written elsewhere.
You know, if you've been watching I've been writing this online.
The FEDS could and likely should consider adding an additional

(45:35):
charge of knowing we'll call it reckless disregard that a
dangerous alien has been released. You're basically harboring a felon
at this point. And in case you didn't know, if

(45:58):
harboring you know an illgal alien was a bad thing
or not. Another judge was he Arizona or New Mexico?
Where's Cano or Canoe or whatever the hell his name is?
Arrested for having the the TDA gang member living in

(46:18):
his house? Yeah, brilliant. These democrats, I'm telling you they
they're picking a losing battle here, and we're going to
get to that in a second. Here even more but
like all defendants, Dugan is presumed innocent until proven guilty,

(46:39):
but the evidence against her is pretty damn overwhelming. In
the meantime, Dugan may want to give Massachusetts Judge Joseph
a call and find out what Joseph did in twenty
eighteen if it was worth it, and asked what the
future holds for her, Giving her alleged violation of federal
law and by the way. She might want to study

(47:02):
some American history, because we actually settled the issue of
whether federal law prevails over state law and whether state
officials can defy the federal government back in eighteen sixty five,
and spoiler alert, her side lost. That's I mean, I

(47:25):
don't know what the hell these judges think they're doing.
And now we have another judge issuing an order telling
Customs and Border Patrol that they're not allowed to arrest
and illegal entering our country without a warrant. How do
you get a warrant for somebody that's entering your country illegally.

(47:47):
She thinks she's being clever. I think she wants to
be arrested. That's what I think. And the other thing,
something like that coming from a judge, where is the
instant appeal? Because this would be overturned in a heartbeat.

(48:08):
It needs to be filed, and it needs to be expedited,
and first of all, the Feds should just ignore it.
You know, I don't know, I don't know what else
to say. These fucking judges are losing their damn minds,

(48:31):
and it's all because they don't like Trump.

Speaker 1 (48:34):
Well, so what that would require that they had one
to lose.

Speaker 6 (48:39):
I mean, you know, I'm sure there were judges that
didn't like Joe Biden. You didn't see them trying to
go out of their way to obstruct justice and to
break laws like that just because And what if these
judges started just intervening into everything that every president starts doing,

(49:02):
you know, by we talked about Biden with his regulatory stuff,
what if the judges all started blocking that shit. Oh,
then the Democrats would be screaming, no judicial judicial activism,
they're overreaching their BADGEH.

Speaker 1 (49:19):
Well, I mean, well, so one of the things that
drives me the most crazy, and this is going back
to mister Schumer, who during during Trump's term when the
Supreme Court basically started, when when the Dobbs decision got released,
and all of a sudden, he's making open threats on
a microphone. And now he's talking about how this administration

(49:41):
is is threatening judges, blah blah blah, YadA, YadA, YadA.
He's not. They're not threatening judges. They're arresting judges who
have violated the law and the oath that they took
on their bench.

Speaker 6 (49:51):
Exactly.

Speaker 1 (49:51):
That's a huge difference. But I mean, we're talking about
a dude who just a few short years ago was like,
mister Gore Sutch, you have released the World Wind?

Speaker 6 (50:01):
Oh yeah, oh yeah, yeah yeah, inciting violence against a
Supreme Court justice?

Speaker 1 (50:08):
Did schummeriet Taco Bell before he made the speech? Is
that the world wind he was referring to?

Speaker 6 (50:13):
I mean, because you know, guy thought it was swallow
that shipped his pants in the rotunda.

Speaker 1 (50:18):
But oh you know now that that was on camera.
Remember like CNN they had a recording of him, like
you know, charting and actually did infra red to show
the cloud, which was hilarious. So this is from hot
air and this just came across my feet. So apparently
the Obama conspiracy that Michelle Obama may in fact have

(50:39):
a penis's back and it's her own damn fault this
time during her podcast, and this may this may be
creative creative editing. I don't know in wokeness well enough
to say one way or the other. But there's a
clip going around X that says Michelle Obama and it's
it's speaking to a podcast guest of hers, mister Wayans,
who said he was raising a trans kid. You're raising

(50:59):
a train that warms my heart as a black man,
and that's where the that's where the footage ends. Now, Apparently,
according to the reader's note for context, it said that
in reality, there was a second sentence where she basically
I'm just going to read the note here. The caption
misrepresents Michelle Obama's word. She is asking her podcast guest

(51:21):
Marlon Wayans about his transgender child. An accurate transcript would
start a second sentence after heart that warms my heart,
particularly as a black man. Would you care to share
your experiences? But I still I like it better the
other way.

Speaker 6 (51:38):
I get it. That is what's the deal with the
disproportionate number of celebrities with trans kids versus regular Americans?

Speaker 1 (51:50):
I mean it depends if you listen to Roseanne Barrow
of Hollywood as a much of Satanis's weirdo.

Speaker 6 (51:55):
So, I mean, you know, not she's got her own issues,
But I mean there's there's something to be said for that.
If we remember, right I touched on was it Ryan
Gosling and his wife he's married to Eva Mendez. I

(52:19):
think it is, yeah, And they they left Hollywood. They
moved out of Hollywood because they didn't want their kids
growing up.

Speaker 1 (52:26):
Around that, because everybody over there is nuts.

Speaker 6 (52:30):
Yeah, yeah, apparently apparently, you know, I mean, just wow,
I don't know, I really don't. It just it's it's
almost like these kids don't get a choice, you know.

Speaker 1 (52:47):
Well no, well, I mean they don't. And honestly, with
some of the changes that have come out of the
California legislature, they're taking the choice away from them anyway
because the teachers. The teachers are force feeding them this
idea that if they're not comfortable in their own skin,
and they're probably born in their wrong body, and then
their parents can't do anything to stop it because if
the parents start to say anything about no, we're just
gonna let them figure things out on their own and

(53:08):
decide who they are when they're adults, then all of
a sudden, the state starts trying to step in and say,
you're abusing your child. No, trying to get trying to
give my child puberty blockers is abusing my child. But
you don't seem to.

Speaker 6 (53:19):
Think so, right, So it's crazy, it is, and and
you know, we're now that's.

Speaker 1 (53:27):
An interesting thought from Aggie. She says, apparently, according to
what she just said, most of the trans kids in
Hollywood attend thee specific school. I have not heard that song.

Speaker 6 (53:37):
That would be interesting to see. You know, we're we're
at that point of the show. I guess we gotta
we gotta do GE's guaranteed happy ending.

Speaker 1 (53:46):
Now, kayity yady katy goo outright?

Speaker 6 (53:51):
All right. So, a dog that led a two year
old boy to safety after he spent a night alone
in the Arizona desert last week is being praised for
his heroism, with an influx of gifts from strangers. Who

(54:16):
owns the six year old been arriving at his doorstep
since both you toys, chew toys, snacks, you name it,
he said, just a little bit of everything. Dunton added
that he has heard from people all over the world

(54:39):
since his dog's rescue mission, and that Buford is now
an honorary member of the Yaba Pie County Search and
Rescue Team. The team even gave Beauford a vest. Little
little mister Bowden. What was his name again, Oh? Oh no, yeah,

(54:59):
it was Boden Allen, So Boden is his first name.
Boden wandered off from his family's home in Seligman on
April fourteenth. His father, Cory, said he was working on
the roof while his wife tended to their one year
old child. The couple called family members for help searching

(55:23):
for Boden, and eventually contacted the county Sheriff's office. More
than forty rescuers and a Department of Public Safety helicopter
were brought in to assist. I don't even know how
to process this, Sarah told the news station. I looked
at his empty bed in the middle of the night

(55:43):
and I thought, this can't be real. He's not How
is he not here? How is he out by himself
somewhere in the dark. Dunton, a rancher, said that about
sixteen hours after Oden disappeared, he found the toddler on
his property. According to kpn X, Buford found the sleeping

(56:10):
child under a tree and led him back to Dundon's ranch,
which is about seven miles from the Allen's home. Dundon
previously told kpn X that he had traced the child's
footsteps and found that Buford had escorted him for at
least a mile. Corey told the station that he feels

(56:34):
like God sent that dog to rescue my son, and
said it's unreal and unbelievable. Boden was reunited with his
with Buford, I should say on Monday. The following Monday,
Corey said that life is back to normal for his
family and that Boden is active and exploited. Time to

(57:03):
keep track of him, they chip him like the dog.
So there's let me let me For those that have
never been in the desert, there are about a thousand
ways a night in the desert for a two year
old could end very badly. And how this little boy

(57:28):
settled under a tree and went to sleep and then
was found by a dog and led back to safety
is absolutely fucking amazing. And I you know, I don't
if that's not a happy ending, I don't know what is.

(57:50):
That's just great. What a dog, Anatolian Pyrenees. He's a
he's both rugged and majestic. So you know, do what
you will with that. What a great dog, what a
great story. That's the show, folks. If you like it,
tell your friends. If your friends like it, you need

(58:12):
new ones, but they and you are welcome with me
right here on Wednesday nights kal R and Radio streaming
live on x Twitter.

Speaker 1 (58:23):
Uh that's it, man, I said, jitters full anyway, So
a bit of a programming note before we roll the
final credits. Stacey is off tonight, apparently so is Gene
because I don't I don't find them having anything scheduled,

(58:44):
So we're gonna do a piece meal behind them to
me lines kind of thing for the next hour, So
hang out for that and then I think Amish and
I are on. I see him hanging out in the chat,
so I'm hoping that means his powers back. I'll touch
base with him in a minute to find out. Then
we'll kind of go from there.

Speaker 6 (59:01):
But yeah, anyway, Hey, thanks all for being here. Don't
you got him?

Speaker 1 (59:10):
And if you're smoking them, don't forget it's puff puff
pass motherfucker right, don't forget the past. I hate to play.

Speaker 3 (59:29):
Nothing worse here, medication, don't world, I've been here for
seven years.

Speaker 5 (59:40):
Stopemselves.
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