Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the daily Mojo podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
Come on in the basis will be rye bread Mother's idea.
The simmer flame keeps the water boiling gently while the
cheese is melting, so that Sally can go on to
weather tech. We interrupt this program for a special news
bullet Say.
Speaker 1 (00:18):
God, it's a good man.
Speaker 3 (00:29):
I got my mojoy.
Speaker 4 (00:50):
I don't care about you.
Speaker 5 (00:57):
Adjust your mojo.
Speaker 1 (01:18):
Radio with an attitude. This is your daily Mojoe Freedom
Money edition. The Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service otherwise known
as the FMCS, and who hasn't attended one of their
If you haven't attended one of their Christmas parties again,
(01:39):
look watch the mail for your invitation, because you've been
funding them as well. They occupied a nine story office
tower on K Street. There were sixty employees, many of
whom pretty much worked from home even before the whole scandemic.
The managers had lud jury suites with full bathrooms. One
(02:02):
manager would often be in the shower when she was needed.
Wait a minute, I see I've used that excuse before
you of course, haven't you. Looks If if Bob calls,
I tell him I'm in the shower. Yeah, And unless
it's Tuesday. That's a lie. Another used bathroom as a
(02:22):
cigarette lounge. FMCS recorded that its director was there on
a year's long business trip to DC so that he
could have all of his meals and living expenses covered
by the taxpayers, just because you would show up to
the office. It is a two hundred and thirty employee
agency that exists to serve as a voluntary mediator between
(02:44):
unions and businesses. It is an independent agency, so it's
director nominally reports to the president, but the agency is
so small that in effect there is no oversight at all.
And it showed because when Dogie got in there and
started digging around. Oooo, so there was over at the
(03:09):
Daily Wire, it's Luke Roziak, I believe it is how
you say his name. He spent a year investigating the agency.
Speaker 6 (03:18):
That's a while, Yeah, oh yeah.
Speaker 1 (03:20):
He did this a decade ago, says I found egregious
and self serving violations of hiring, pay, contracting, and purchase
card rules. One thing I could not discover is why
the agency actually existed. Well, come on, we already know
they were a voluntary mediator between union and the unions
and businesses and we need those people, don't we we do.
(03:41):
How are we ever going to get.
Speaker 6 (03:43):
By if we don't have those folks.
Speaker 1 (03:46):
I mean, that's like going a day without sunshine. It
is this is this is horrific news, and I can't
imagine that they are thinking about shuddering this this this
place uh endless junkets to resort destinations employees openly used
to facilitate personal vacations. They were justified as building awareness
(04:09):
of the agency. Again, who hasn't used that excuse with
their If you have a small business and you go
on a vacation somewhere and you talk to somebody about
your business, I can write this off now.
Speaker 6 (04:23):
Yeah, yeah, I've done it. I do it quite often.
Speaker 1 (04:27):
Actually, his name is Ron Phillips. They were justifi as
building awareness of the agency in the hopes that someone
would actually want to use its voluntary services. It existed,
According to the author of the piece at the Daily Wire,
it existed for the benefit of those on its payroll
(04:48):
and not much else. One employee told him, let me
give you the honest truth. A lot of FMCS employees
don't do a hell of a lot, including myself personally.
The reason that I've stayed is that I just don't
feel like working that hard.
Speaker 6 (05:04):
Let's be honest, shall we right?
Speaker 1 (05:07):
Plus the location on K Street is great. Plus we
have all these oversized offices with windows. Plus management doesn't
seem to care if we stay out at lunch a
long time. Can you blame me? No, I don't know that.
This must have been when Luke was undercover, because can
(05:28):
you imagine saying that to someone with a microphone? Tell
me how you feel working here at the FMCS. Well,
be honest, truth again, the Jeffy's rule. Just because there
is a microphone in front of your face, you do
not have to talk another Top FMCS. And remember you're
(05:49):
footing the bill for all this, at least up to
this point. Top FMCS official George Cohen, probably not the
same one who wrote all the show tunes, just guessing,
used a recreation and Reception fund to order champagne and
two hundred dollars two hundred dollars coasters for his office.
(06:13):
What the hell does a two hundred dollars coaster look like?
You know a little thing you put up underneath your drink, yeah,
oh yeah, to keep you to keep your drink from
you know, making a stain on your wood that were
gold plating. Would a go I mean seriously, with a
gold plated coaster cost two hundred.
Speaker 6 (06:33):
Bucks a set of them?
Speaker 1 (06:35):
Partly would all right? I was gonna say, you're right, silly.
It's not one coaster, it's a set of coasters.
Speaker 6 (06:41):
Duh.
Speaker 1 (06:43):
And he also bought artwork painted by his wife. Oh, man,
I wish there was some Well, that's one way to
do it. I guess right. It's that he took lessons
from Hunter Biden. Hang on, let's just see if his wife.
(07:04):
Wikipedia says he's an American lawyer. Oh, he's an American lawyer.
He is a former director of the Federal Mediation and
Conciliation Service in the United States. He was appointed in
two thousand and nine.
Speaker 6 (07:15):
By that would be Barack Obum.
Speaker 1 (07:19):
That is absolutely correct. He was born in New York,
raised Long Island. Excuse me, Long Island. He attended Cornell
Let's see. Oh. He also bought and this is in
his Wikipedia now the Wikipedia article sites Sites of Peace
(07:50):
by Luke from twenty thirteen. All right, so same author,
but that's where the citation comes from. He also bought
a thirteen hundred dollars chair. Okay, I can see that.
I can see it. I can see it. A chair
cost thirty thirteen hundred bucks. I mean, that's strangely if
(08:11):
you want a really good chair that's not out of
the realm of possibilities. Now I'm gonna guess at the
chair he bought for thirteen hundred bucks. Probably is ugly
and not comfortable like art, but functional. I bet it's functional.
What are those Han or you know what those chairs are?
I'm looking real quick. Yes, expensive office. I mean Han
(08:34):
makes furniture of office furniture. Well you look. Cohen also
retaliated against two whistleblowers who brought spending concerns to government regulators.
He fired one after a hospital stay, and paid another
hundreds of thousands of dollars to settle retaliation complaint.
Speaker 6 (08:51):
Herman. The Herman Miller chairs run run in the thousands,
and they're office chairs. They you know, the net back
office chairs. Oh yeah, the that have all the functionality
you can lean back you can at.
Speaker 1 (09:06):
The other place. When I was the building, what the
hell was my title building manager? No? I was not. Well,
I was in charge of the custodian. Yeah, okay, but
I was technically the facilities manager. Okay, And all that
(09:26):
has to do with is is your your your pay category?
So it's so you don't get over time. It's a
it's an HR thing. Anyway, they were trying to decide
whether or not to move all of these chairs out
of New York and the the old office, which was
the former Yahoo office. And these chairs, these office chairs.
(09:50):
I looked them up. There were there's like sixty of them.
And these things were eight hundred bucks apiece. Yeah, and
I'm like, at your standard office chair too. Hell yeah.
Put those on a truck. And when they got down here,
I'm like, really, this is this is what you get
for eight hundred bucks? Yeah, okay, I was not impressed.
(10:14):
Oh yeah, you're right.
Speaker 6 (10:15):
The Herman Miller chairs. You know what I'm talking about.
Speaker 1 (10:18):
Yeah yeah, Here look at this one. Yeah, holy schnikey.
So it's okay, maybe that's what he bought. You're right,
all right, let's give him the benefit of the doubt. Okay,
thirteen hundred dollars office chair. That thing better give you
one hell of a massage. He also personally forced a
third whistleblower to write an email retracting her allegations to
(10:41):
the GSA. This guy sounds like a piece of work,
does he not m And again this has been a
few years ago. This guy, This is coming from Luke's article.
In twenty thirteen, the FMCS had issued the statement to
the examine saying, these items which the examiner is inquiring about,
(11:03):
appear to have been the subject of a now settled
employment dispute involving a disgruntled FMCS employee. These purchasing issues
were addressed in a settlement, but must remain confidential under
federal personnel rules, as noted in the absence of a
release from the employee. Huh. He then retired from the
(11:26):
agency a whilst back. See FMCS employees back to current
day now unblock their government credit cards to turn off
abuse protections, then use them to fund personal expenses and
build anything they wanted to us. One employee at least
(11:47):
a BMW. Another, the IT director James Donnan, build the
government for his wife's cell phone, cable TV at both
his home and his vacation home, and even his subscription
to US today. Wow. Another employee, man the balls on
these people. They have a wheelbearer to carry those things around.
(12:08):
In employee by the name of Dan Funkhauser, Hi Funkhouser.
Dan Funkhouser used his FMCS card to rent a storage
unit near his home in rural Virginia, two hours from
(12:29):
the office he supposedly worked out, which was used to
store personal possessions like a photo album of his dog Buster.
He also spent eighteen thousand dollars at a jewelry store
near it. This is not funny, you know, it's not
funny because we paid for this. We did eighteen thousand
dollars at a jewelry store near his house and destroyed
(12:51):
all purchase credit card, all purchase card records. Upon leaving
the agency, Charles Burton retired from this fas he incorporated
an LLC, to which another FMCS employee paid eighty five
thousand dollars using his purchase card. Whoa, so one guy
(13:15):
retires forms an LLC. A dude who's still working at
the FMCS pays him eighty five grand using the purchase card,
listing it as a call center service, even though the
company had neither a website nor a working phone. What
do you want about then they split the money? Of course?
(13:35):
Oh yeah, wow, an accountant blew the whistle and financial abuses.
Then this is the one who Carol Booth was the
one who was forced to send the letter of retraction.
Let's say there's employees in order to gradually another engage
(13:57):
work blah blah blah. One purchase was for thirty thousand
dollars on trinkets marketing employees anniversaries. The agency's office was
absurdly oversized, but it refused to move. It hired a
consultant for a hallway improvement project. A hallway improvement project.
We need to get one of those here at the motel,
don't we. They decorated the hallway. It had an in
(14:19):
house gym for employees. They purchased one thousand dollars TV
for the gym. Depends on when they bought it. I mean, hell,
now you can get a sixty inch flat screen TV.
Is there any other kind at Costco? For like three
hundred bucks? When you go in there and see those,
do you not want to buy four of them? Just because?
Speaker 6 (14:41):
Absolutely? Because you can?
Speaker 1 (14:43):
Right you can? Now you could put you could make
a wall of video for like twelve hundred dollars. It
just it's hard to resist that urge. Sometimes they oho
a three eight hundred and sixty seven dollars. Ice maker?
(15:04):
Now if it does those little bitty w I the
pebble ice. Yeah, the pebble ice. I knew you were
living all ritchy high on the hog. I'm not ritchy.
Speaker 6 (15:13):
I just locked that kind of eyes.
Speaker 1 (15:14):
If you've got the pedalal, if you've got the pebble ize,
you're ritchy high on.
Speaker 6 (15:17):
The g It's a ge opel.
Speaker 1 (15:20):
Was it four thousand dollars? No?
Speaker 6 (15:22):
No, it was three hundred plus. That's what you said
they paid.
Speaker 1 (15:26):
No, I did not. Oh, I said they paid three thousand,
eight hundred and sixty seven dollars for an ice maker.
For an ice maker, all right, Well it.
Speaker 6 (15:37):
Wasn't the kind that I bought in. I think it
was about five hundred bucks.
Speaker 1 (15:43):
Still, spent a lot for an ice maker.
Speaker 6 (15:45):
Come on, dude, hell do you sonic ice? Come on?
Got it for Christmas?
Speaker 1 (15:51):
We'll say so. They also bought a five hundred and
sixty dollars stereo. The expenses that were actually business related
were hardly in better. According to the piece, it paid
eight hundred and ninety five dollars for Suzanne Nickers enrollment
in The English Essentials, a Grammar refresher course. I guess
(16:12):
she is one of the employees. And another seven hundred
and thirty five dollars for Lakeisha Stewart to attend listening
and memory Skills development course. And it goes on and on.
Another employee was paid one hundred and seventy four thousand
dollars a year. He had his duty station listed at
(16:35):
Iowa so that he could have all of his living
expenses and food paid for in d C where he
lived and worked. We paid for all this. When an
employee raised the issue to the agency lawyer, the lawyer
told him he should not raise these issues. It could
open a can of worms. This is what people in
(16:56):
DC are terrified of. And they're going after Elon Musk
for digging this stuff up. Now do you understand.
Speaker 6 (17:06):
Without a doubt, dude, I mean they what was it
I read in the in the news yesterday that when
Dose tried to enter the what did we call it
the Center for Peace or whatever, the US Institute for Peace. Yeah,
when they tried to enter the anger, they freaking blocked
him out and then barricaded themselves inside and said they
(17:28):
were quote unquote unauthorized, called the cops on them. The
cops got there, they let them in.
Speaker 1 (17:36):
Well, they came with federal marshalls and then the private
security firm that the people inside the US Institute for Peace.
Remember he was George Moose, mister Moose.
Speaker 6 (17:47):
Yep, And well they replaced him and he was like, Nope,
you didn't know you you didn't have authorization to do that,
and they said the hell we didn't.
Speaker 1 (17:57):
And his own the security firm, the private security firhim
that he hired basically quit said no, no, no, we're not Nope.
Speaker 6 (18:06):
We're doing We're not gonna fight the freaking fans. Are
you kidding me?
Speaker 1 (18:10):
So these are the people that we're that we are
at war with now. I mean, Maxine Waters has called
for a civil war.
Speaker 6 (18:21):
Right she has multiple times?
Speaker 1 (18:23):
So is this is this?
Speaker 6 (18:25):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (18:27):
Is this who we're railing against now? And Elon Musk, who,
by the way, yesterday he's what twenty first. Within the
past week or so, X formerly known as Twitter, has
raised almost a billion dollars in new equity funding and
(18:50):
has retired the debt that he incurred when he bought it. Wow.
Nice right, Yeah, it h so good. I mean, at
least good things are happening, while at the same time
they're fire bombing his you know, his infrastructure. I mean,
(19:13):
it's insane what's happening. But those are mostly protests, right right,
exactly right, it's I mean, it's not violently.
Speaker 6 (19:23):
It's mostly peaceful protesting.
Speaker 1 (19:26):
Mostly peaceful. You're right. I don't know how I could
have it. And you've got people like Rick Wilson over here.
He the Lincoln Project and he was suspended for thirty
days because of his post. He's like, why did I
(19:46):
get suspended? His post was kill Tesla, save the country.
Speaker 6 (19:51):
Yep, that'll do it.
Speaker 1 (19:55):
I mean, and they say that we're violent. This is
so oh, mind blowingly ironic and irritating. It's it's off
the charts. It is off the hook. Ron as the
kids are saying, this stuff is off the hook.
Speaker 6 (20:16):
Don't try to be hip gen z Or.
Speaker 1 (20:18):
And it's sick. Wait, it's lit. What's sick?
Speaker 6 (20:23):
It's lit.
Speaker 1 (20:25):
I'm told that lit can be used, but sick cannot
be used in this. It is not sick because sick
is good. Now, yes, dude, that is sick? Is it?
Is it dope? Nope, that's not it's not that's boomer told,
it's not dope. It's not dope. Is groovy, groovy is
(20:46):
on the fence. I don't know if it's groovy, Probably isn't,
but it is definitely off the hook. Is it off
the rails? It could be off the rails as well,
I'm told. So we've got all of that. If you
want to weigh in with your sick comments, if you
want to be off the hook, you want to be
(21:07):
on the hook, use the hashtag well I learned today?
Follow us on social media at real Brad stags at
Real ron Phillips. And whether you're listening live today. If
today is the twenty first day of March here of
our Lord twenty twenty five, you could be listening live
on Rumble at the Dailymojo dot com, on YouTube, any
(21:28):
number of locations. If you're listening and it's like Sunday
and I say it's Friday, then you are not listening live.
You are listening via the podcast, So you can't really
technically participate. You can pretend to, but you we won't
see it, most likely over in the Rumble chat room docs.
Clock Tower says, I even remember a quote from the
(21:50):
book nineteen eighty four that I posted on Facebook once
in two popular groups in which Glennbecken dot comson read
aloud the very next morning. What was it? I have
to scroll backwards? How was it? What was the damn?
What was so? I'm still off in here. I'm sure
(22:10):
you know the Twitter handle by note what? Oh wait? No,
all right, so we'll never know what it was that
he posted? It was so good? Yeah? Fine? Oh wombat, mommy,
how did you end up with with the Chad Trent
phone call? Poor dude? And and Trent not not not Chad.
(22:37):
What was the other dude's name? Uh, Chris, Chris not
tris good? Yeah, Chris not Chris, Trent not Chris. I
mean hopefully he's I hope he's still out there listening.
We gave him the opportunity to call in and and
and and voice his concerns, his and he tadly didn't
(22:59):
really have any that weren't It's kind of token talking points.
Yeah yeah, but you know we're listening, and we did
listen at great risk to my personal and professional reputation,
so bugs bum says, and then brag got bored and
kind of booted Trent not Chris. Well, it would just
(23:19):
you know, if it had been we weren't going anywhere Yeah,
he wasn't taking that. That was just the bus was
just kind of sitting there at the intersection and idling
and wasting a lot of fuel. And now I owe
Jeff Fisher a great deal of money for taking away.
He was paid four minutes. So you know, I even
spent money to allow Trent not Chris his airtime. So
(23:46):
Trent not Chris, don't say I never gave you nothing.
With that money. You could be out there buying some
American Pride Roaster's coffee. You could. It's what I used
this morning. It was my drug of choice this morning
to wake up. For the most part, you can get
yours today at Americanpride Roasters dot Com simply by going
to Americanpride Roasters dot Com and purchasing some. And we're
(24:08):
now in that this would be almost if not this year,
because we're in spring, so this is like ideal roasting season.
I would think for DM up in Dismoynus, because it's
not too hot, it's not too cold. I don't know
what the weather is today in dismoyn Us, but it
certainly can't be all. It's not snowing, I'm guessing, although
(24:32):
I guess it could be because you know, but sorry,
have you got this strayed pecompassays Brad. Now you owe
us at least eight minutes and forty five seconds of
informative content to make up for the wasted TDS Trent time.
Speaker 6 (24:47):
I know not snowing. He's got forty three degrees today
going to be a high fifty seven and all right, yeah,
this is great roasting.
Speaker 1 (24:56):
If he is not roasting in his driveway right now,
we're gonna get up, we get get your ass out
of bed, get out during roast because there's gonna be
people ordering American Pride Roasters coffee to day and you
need to have it ready. So uh, if you are interested,
(25:16):
go to American Pride Roasters dot com and get you
some American Pride Roasters dot com. Thank god it's Friday.
Speaker 3 (25:27):
Hey, where are the white women.
Speaker 1 (25:29):
At the Daily Mojo? You know, initially I was gonna
say that this is sad news, but I don't know
that it is. I think it's kind of sad because
this now you'll see, Uh, this is uh Martina Big.
(25:54):
She's thirty six years old, she's from Germany, and she
and her husband Michael are both now going to me
I thought we were losing them as American citizens, but
apparently they're moving from Germany. I believe. I don't think
they're living in this country, but they're they're moving from
Germany to Africa, mainly because Martina identifies as black.
Speaker 6 (26:24):
And this woman here does.
Speaker 1 (26:26):
Yeah. Oh that's an old picture. Sorry, let me get
you the current picture of Martina. Thank you, Martina big Is.
There's Martina. Ohs Martina has. She is a glamour model.
And those she and her husband boat. They're a little distracting,
aren't they?
Speaker 6 (26:45):
Wow a little bit.
Speaker 1 (26:48):
Let me just put it this way. This woman has
absolutely she's in no danger of drowning. Although if you
did fall into a body of water large enough with those,
wouldn't they rise to the top and basically your head
would be underwater?
Speaker 6 (27:04):
Maybe?
Speaker 1 (27:05):
Yeah, especially if you're unconscious, you probably get into those
big jokers right. They would whack you right right upside
the face and take you to thirty two t breasts.
And yeah, they they're not real.
Speaker 6 (27:22):
Do they even make brawls for that?
Speaker 1 (27:26):
Omar the tent maker does. Well, you just you go
to home depot and grab you a tart and some rope.
Whoop one up real fast. She has She and her
husband both inject melotonin. I wait to say, excuse me now,
I thought this was a misprint, but maybe it's not.
(27:48):
They both inject melonotan melanitan. That's a synthetic hormone. Let
me see if the I'm so, I all right, just
double check to make sure that's not something me meal.
That's not it? Uh mellow, that sounds like more what
(28:12):
it would be melo melan melanitan. Get yours today? Melanotan.
It's a synthetic hormone design to stimulate pigment cells to
produce more melanin, which gives you a tan when exposed
to UB rays. They can be injected with needles or
used in a nasal spray.
Speaker 6 (28:34):
That's that's intriguing to me. Can I get you some No? No,
no no?
Speaker 1 (28:42):
Would you shoot it or would you snort it?
Speaker 6 (28:45):
Oh? I probably shoot I don't know if i'd try
snorting it first.
Speaker 1 (28:49):
Well, it's a spray, so it's just you know, it's
just like like a little affron, Yeah, little affron then
lay out in the sun. Is that where they get
the name afron? What I'm saying that, I mean, if
you could it's snort and afron and look like her
because afs an affron and it's not connected. Look, it
(29:13):
was worth a shot. Wait oh, I didn't even try
and I got that one. It was worth a shot.
Come on, it's available to purchase online.
Speaker 6 (29:23):
Whoa.
Speaker 1 (29:25):
Although it's available to purchase online, Milana tan is illegal, untested,
and unregulated. It gives you a hell of a tan
though that's actually where you're testing subject. No kidding. So
she and her partner are moving to Africa because she said,
(29:45):
we've gotten a lot of fan mail. We've received invitations
from fans in many African countries and it's she's going
to be Is she going to be well received?
Speaker 6 (30:00):
I mean, I can't say that she will be.
Speaker 1 (30:04):
Let me just say, if you're listening to the podcast
right now, you are missing out big time.
Speaker 6 (30:09):
The word and the word poser comes to mind.
Speaker 1 (30:12):
I don't look at how cute she was. Yeah, she
was a genuinely pretty woman. Went from that to that,
what the hell makes you do that? Since most of
my modeling jobs are in Europe and the US, her husband,
(30:35):
her partner, feels that it will be difficult for her
to earn money in Africa. Interesting did she just intimate
that she's going to look alike with all of them?
I mean, that's what she's saying, right, there's nothing about
her facial features that indicate Africa to me. Oh, you're right,
(31:02):
it was a shadow her noses. I was gonna say,
maybe she might have a broader nose, but no, she doesn't.
It's a cute little button nose.
Speaker 6 (31:10):
Oh well, uh she.
Speaker 1 (31:11):
Go by She now goes by the name of uh
but not Martina Big but uh Malika Kubwa and that
means big Angel in Swahili. She claims to have the
largest breasts in Europe. She's also gone undergone lip augmentation
and plans to undergo a butt augmentation and surgery to
(31:34):
what what I say, to widen her nose before going
to Africa? What the hell do you do with those things?
I just I mean, here's another here's another. I want
not going to say it's a better angle, but here's
another angle of her. Oh lord, seriously, what do you
(31:56):
do with those? Those have got to her hurt? I mean,
you've got to be exhaust Hell, that'd be like, you know,
us carrying around a water melon or two tape duct
tape them to your chest, and her back's got to
hurt all the time, I would think. And when you
(32:18):
have those things taken out, man, you are gonna you
know what, She's gonna keep between her breasts at that point,
anything she wants her knees shim a knee. I just
I just don't understand. I mean, you've really got to
have something going. I mean, gears ain't messing upstairs if
(32:43):
you're doing that, are they?
Speaker 6 (32:48):
Well? In that photo right there, she's had some work
done on her face because it looks different than what
her uh than the other picture you showed.
Speaker 1 (32:59):
As a black woman or.
Speaker 6 (33:05):
I am interesting.
Speaker 1 (33:08):
I had just I know, right, people can be so
so damn strange sad to see her go. Yeah, isn't it?
Did you? Did you just tell me that fellows on
because he's also black that way, you know, I just
(33:29):
you O.
Speaker 6 (33:30):
He's in the green room right now.
Speaker 1 (33:32):
Wow, he doesn't look anything like her.
Speaker 6 (33:36):
Just stop, I didn't say that.
Speaker 1 (33:39):
Oh you intimated.
Speaker 6 (33:41):
Ella is a good looking man, dude. I see you
smiling there, Phil, Yep, thumbs up, baby, Ron.
Speaker 1 (33:52):
Once you go black?
Speaker 6 (33:55):
Yeah, okay, yeah, uh.
Speaker 1 (34:00):
Anyway, we'll get to fill next here on the Daily mojo, then.
Speaker 5 (34:05):
Taste the honey sauce like I like it.
Speaker 1 (34:09):
Oh yeah, this is the daily mojo Friday. That quarter says,
take him out, her chest will look like a nutsack. Yeah,
I'm trying to envision that. Bug's mom says, do normal
(34:30):
men even find that attractive? No? I don't know, well,
she said, normal men. And do we qualify because I
don't even know. Well, you don't because you don't like
big boobs. But I like big boobs, not that big.
And you cannot lie and I cannot lie.
Speaker 6 (34:47):
I mean not.
Speaker 1 (34:49):
My dog says wow. And Missy thirteen says, I don't
think so unless they have a boob fetish. That's not
even a boob fetish. That's just like as And you
know what if you like those good on, you good on?
How do you can you imagine her on an on
an airplane.
Speaker 6 (35:08):
Sitting next to those well, you couldn't see anything. She'd
blocked the window block.
Speaker 1 (35:17):
It's not funny because when you buy a ticket and
you want to see out the window. Let me just
say that's the fact you're not You're not going to
be happy. Uh, ladies and gentlemen, please welcome to the program.
Speaker 6 (35:29):
Phil Bell sorry for that intro. Phil.
Speaker 7 (35:32):
You don't know her, do you feel I look, she's
not my She's not my cup of tea, but I'm
going to say that, actually, hold on, she's not my
cup of American Pride Roaster's Calvin Cool.
Speaker 1 (35:43):
It's coffee, which I am drinking as we speak. Thank you.
Speaker 8 (35:49):
You know what this reminded me of when I we'd
ride the train and when you have to walk through
the train cars on the way to get to the
dining car, you can't pass. So I'm trying to imagine
trying to pass her on the way to the dining car.
Speaker 1 (36:03):
I might enjoy it at the same time, you know,
I wouldn't know whether to be excited or terrified.
Speaker 6 (36:12):
I just want to box.
Speaker 1 (36:13):
Them, do I mean? Now, what do they feel like
they've got to be like herd as a rock?
Speaker 3 (36:19):
Right?
Speaker 8 (36:20):
I mean, that'd be my guess. But you know, it
also makes me think about what you could do. So
if you took this afron and then you said you
were a Democrat, you could qualify for so many subsidies
and freebies and special treatment. I mean it's like Rachel
Dole is all but on steroids.
Speaker 1 (36:39):
Yes, right, yeah, yeah, Rachel dole You remember her, amateur? Yeah? Yeah,
well how could you forget she was the regional director
of the NAACP. Hello, I mean at least she's yep
h In some ways you got to hand it to Rachel.
And in other ways, I mean, and amateur compared to
(37:01):
this chick, because this chick was like, oh no, hold
my beer, watch this whooh, I'm just dumbfound.
Speaker 8 (37:13):
The crazy thing is they're both attractive without all the modifications.
Because Rachel Dolesoll is very pretty and just of course crazy,
so she ranks pretty high on the hot crazy scale, right,
and this one I just don't.
Speaker 1 (37:29):
Yeah, I really don't. I do not understand that. But
there are a lot of things and you know what
it just let mean, while while I'm thinking about it,
you are never going to get these stories on Good
Morning America. You're not going to get this kind of
in depth analysis on breast that big on Good Morning
America and then right next to it, find out something
about property taxes in Florida. Right, I mean, this is
(37:52):
a unique program. Let's talk about Florida. This is a
fascinating story that you sent me. I didn't I had
not heard about this.
Speaker 8 (38:01):
Well, This is a big problem for Florida. And I'll
give you a good example. There was a couple and
this was in the Wall Street Journal. They purchased twenty
twenty two, Zoe Losada and her husband. They purchased a
home in Palm Beach Gardens. They wanted to retire. Eight
hundred nine thousand dollars was a home price. Originally their
property tax bill was six thousand dollars. It went all
the way up to ten seven hundred dollars.
Speaker 1 (38:23):
Now why is that. Well, as we.
Speaker 8 (38:24):
Were all going out and buying homes during COVID and
everything else, all the craziness, what happens, Well, the jackass
named the property tax assessor always walks around and decides, hey,
your house is now worth more, so they charge you
more in property taxes. As we all know, Florida has
seen this explode because of so many people migrating there,
(38:46):
obviously to escape other insanity, and so they are looking
at there's legislation going through their legislature that would eliminate
the property tax, and there's also other efforts to curb
it or expand the homestead exemption, which is a way
that it can be lowered. But I wanted to bring
this up because this is something that we as patriots
(39:07):
need to fight for, is abolition of these taxes completely.
Speaker 1 (39:12):
Absolutely, you never truly own your property in the United
States of America. The way the system is currently set up,
you never own it because if you make a misstep,
and by misstep, I mean don't pay your property taxes,
the government can take your property away from you and
sell it and put the money in their pocket, which
is talk about tyrannical.
Speaker 8 (39:38):
And in some places, and I think Tampon Tim's Minnesota
is one of these.
Speaker 1 (39:42):
One of the things they.
Speaker 8 (39:43):
Could do is let's say you owed six thousand dollars
in property taxes, but your property was worth five hundred
thousand dollars. They could take it from you, sell it,
and even pocket all that money, so you know, your
six thousand dollars debt was satisfied and they keep everything
else and just kick you out. So what's really interesting, though,
(40:04):
are some of the people who were posted this.
Speaker 3 (40:07):
Now.
Speaker 8 (40:07):
Of course liberal Democrats, they oppose it. We know liberal
Democrats oppose it because they don't want you to own property,
and that's the truth. But there are conservative Republicans, including
in that article Don Gates, who of course is related
to Matt Gates. He says, oh no, I don't think
it would be responsible to get rid of this. And
that's what makes the fight so difficult, because we have
(40:28):
had centuries of Americans who believe that we have to
pay these taxes to fund whatever the government wants to do,
and they always say schools and whatnot, But we never
think outside the box and say, well, what could happen
if we got rid of that hammer and looked at
things in a completely different way.
Speaker 1 (40:46):
Don Gates is he how is he related to Matt?
I think he's his father. I think Don is his father.
Speaker 8 (40:55):
And Don had been Senate Majority leader for a while
in the flow to state Senate, and now Florida has
term limits, thankfully, so he was out. But of course
after you stay a while out, you can come back in.
So he's back in. And by the way, I liked
Don Gates. I think he did a good job. But
I just wanted to highlight that as the kind of
opposition that you face when you have these conversations about
(41:17):
making a dramatic change.
Speaker 1 (41:20):
Yeah, And in the piece in the in the Journal,
it says killing the property taxes is unlikely because that
would leave the state more reliant on sales tax. It
would also strip local governments of revenue to fund everything
from schools to social services. But the idea is gaining
political traction. Yeah, I mean, as a homeowner, how could
(41:40):
you not be in favor of this. It's that that
boggles my mind that anybody could be opposed to getting
rid of the of property taxes. Again, it's so it's
not a fair system in that if you own the
you never own the property you have you or in perpetuity,
(42:02):
you have to pay the government for you know, existing
on the land. But I guess the flips of that
argument is, well, you're still taking You're still using the services.
You're still using the sewer, you're still using the water lines.
You know, you're still using the street in front of it.
So how do you justify getting rid of the of
(42:23):
the taxes in that sense? Well, that's a great question.
I'm glad you asked. So let's think about it.
Speaker 8 (42:30):
If I'm using the sewer and I'm using the water,
we pay for it, right, don't you get a bill?
Speaker 1 (42:35):
They hand you a bill, especially the water company.
Speaker 8 (42:37):
Pretty much everywhere, whether it's municipally owned or otherwise they
give you a bill, they can do the exact same
thing for the sewer.
Speaker 1 (42:44):
But here's the other thing to think about.
Speaker 8 (42:46):
Property taxes go up, and it's almost always up with
respect to the.
Speaker 1 (42:51):
Value of the property.
Speaker 8 (42:52):
But government, its costs do not go up with respect
to the services they provide you. And government is almost
all the biggest consumer of whatever services that it provides.
Speaker 1 (43:03):
So you think about roadbuilding.
Speaker 8 (43:05):
How many other you know, they don't really compete in
order to get contractors to build roads because the government
builds most of the roads. So therefore, the costs should
not be going up every year, but the property taxes
are going up every year. That means they have the
freedom to not only kick you out if you don't
pay it, but they have the freedom to extort you
for services that cost nowhere near what they're charging.
Speaker 1 (43:28):
And there is absolutely no accountability.
Speaker 8 (43:31):
And these reprobates and I call them reprobates, and yes,
I mean a lot of you who are Republicans do
at the local level. They don't care and they don't
want to do anything about it because it financially benefits them.
Speaker 1 (43:44):
Wow, why do you hate our elected officials? Love us
and want us to be happy. Is that not apparent
to you? I just don't understand people like you and
Ron who have all this animosity towards these people who
are just trying to enhance our life lives. Public servants,
they're called public service reason because they servant the public.
Speaker 8 (44:08):
I think some of them have some of those weird,
we'll say predilections where they want you to be happy
when you're getting whipped, because that's what they're doing to
us every time they send a bit.
Speaker 1 (44:23):
Ron's familiar with that stuff. He's into all that S
and M stuff. Oh that's right. I'm sorry. I did
not mean to let that cat out of the bagground
I apologize, But the whole S and M. I don't
know if Corey Bush and her husband are into the
S and M, but they're certainly into bending the rest
of us over this story from the Free Beacon Corey
(44:49):
Bush's husband, and Corey Bush is such a warm hearted individual.
I just I got to heart to her first of all,
because she is every time she opens her mouth. You
just I'm not gonna say Sean now, I'm not even
to mention Sean Connery's name in this. But apparently Corey
Bush's husband has been now indicted for wire fraud and
(45:10):
this has something to do with COVID and the relief
funds tell you this is not true. The PPP loans,
how about that?
Speaker 3 (45:19):
All?
Speaker 8 (45:19):
This is one thing it seems like they all fall
into the trap of Whenever the PPP loans came out,
they just said, you know what, this is going to
be a bonanza for me. Let me try to get
as much as I can. But the interesting thing, of
course you want to highlight is it's Corey Bush's husband, which,
in my opinion, really does implicate her, because I do
not believe anybody has an actual marriage where the husband
(45:42):
is running around committing financial fraud and the wife is
just standing around talking about how she says, the Jews, sorry,
let me.
Speaker 1 (45:49):
Say it the right way.
Speaker 8 (45:50):
The Jews, in her parlance, kicked her out of Congress
right while he's just over here committing some PPP loan fraud.
I want to bring this up because because this is
another example of what DOGE is fighting, and it is
an example what President Trump is fighting, which is the
corruption that is so closely associated with our elected officials
(46:11):
because they're involved in it, either directly or indirectly.
Speaker 1 (46:15):
You saw the piece on the financial hang on. What
what the hell is it called? This agency? The financial
the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Services them. Oh yes, I
did the case. I mean, yeah, beautiful. What have you
(46:38):
seen the building what to look like? No, I haven't seen.
Speaker 8 (46:42):
Well I probably have because I drive down that portion
of K Street all the time, and for anybody out there,
I drive through that portion of K Street, not because
I live there, but it's Those are the best offices
in Washington, d C. They're beautiful. They're right on a
main drag that makes it easy for you to get
the heck out of Washington, d C. And it is
(47:03):
the kind of place where if you are going to
be a high powered lobbyist and you want to receive
potential clients there, that's where you want to be.
Speaker 1 (47:12):
This is the building. Oh look, I say, I've got
a nice sign there on the front, the Federal Mediation
and Conciliation Service. I mean it's not a glamorous building.
I mean it's a tall building. And you know they
could now all that money that they were sucking down,
you'd think they could have afford some nice mini blinds.
First thing I see is a shitty mini blinds covering
(47:35):
the windows.
Speaker 8 (47:37):
Well, remember, the key with these buildings is not so
much what they look like on the outside, it's all
the stuff you have on the inside. And what did
that article talk about that they had, you know, the
artwork and everything else that was in there in their offices,
and it was is apparently incredibly beautiful in there.
Speaker 1 (47:58):
And the just I mean this goes hand in hand
with the with the Corey Busch story and that they
have been They've all been bending us over for so
long without even so much as a not even an
Eskimo kiss, much less, you know, a regular kiss. They
(48:20):
haven't even been just ooping our nothing they've been giving.
It's been take, take, take, without even just a little
pat on the fanny. We get nothing out of this, uh.
And they're just so rude in the way that they
that they're doing it to us. And when you see
stories like Corey Booker, Corey Booker, I'm sorry, I just
(48:40):
saw a story about he Corey Booker and Harry Sisson.
It's your fault because it's a free beacon not to
let any other cats out of the bag. But Harry
Sisson may not be gay. That's a different story. But
when you see Corey Bush's husband and you see the
you know him possibly taken all of this money, because again,
(49:02):
innocent until proven guilty, right at least that's the way
it used to be. But it's not even surprising anymore.
That's the sad part. We've gotten so used to it.
It's not surprising. It's just like, all right, another one.
And and we're so used to not seeing these people
taken down, with the exception of Menendez, which makes me
(49:27):
wonder who Bob Menendez pissed off to get taken down
and taken out the way he did. I mean, why
don't these Do you have any insight on that one?
By the way, what was it that Menendez did that
caused the machine to swallow him? Well, that's the thing.
Speaker 8 (49:46):
I have not seen anything that's completely out of line
that he's done. If I had to guess, it's probably,
you know, something small. Maybe he was probably getting involved
with someone's girlfriend, wife, boyfriend, who knows, you know over there.
But what you point out is very very interesting and
(50:07):
it's true. So look at this two ways. The number
one way they get over on us is because we
allow them to. I remember being much younger, and I
was whining about property taxes with my grandmother. And my
grandmother's a everic conservatives, still alive. She's ninety six now,
great lady, but she said what so many people say, Oh, look,
(50:28):
the government's going to get theirs. So for a very
long time, a lot of us just accepted that whether
it is the parking meters and being you know, charging
you so much there, or the property tax or income
tax or whatever it is, we all kind of write
it off as look, it's something you have to do.
Just go ahead and do it, keep your head down
and try to get to Friday when you can hopefully relax.
(50:51):
And the second thing, and this is also very important,
is that because we've enabled it, so many of them
have been able to lie to themselves and use a
phrase I hate, which is public service. And they say, oh,
well listen, I'm a public servant. Oh I'm a civil servant.
Like it, like they're doing something for us. But they
are able to use that curve as a way to
(51:12):
tell themselves, oh, look, well it's okay if we redo
our offices and we have a company to come in
to water ten plants and spend you know, several thousand
dollars to do it when we could just go over
the sink and dump some water in the plants, you know,
that kind of thing. And so if we don't stand
up and we accept it, they're going to do it.
Speaker 1 (51:31):
And that's the ballgame. Well, and that's what I've always
thought that Joe Biden.
Speaker 6 (51:39):
Was.
Speaker 1 (51:40):
That was his mindset that you know, I've been in
public service for so long and I've done so much
for this country that I deserve. I think that he
probably in his mind, justified all the crap that they
were doing with Barisma and China because he deserved it,
you know, as a as a perk, because I've done
I've been in God's work out here and this is
(52:02):
just something that you know, it should be in my
column and I'm not hurting anybody heard. And they justified
in their own heads that way, and streams. There are
probably people out there who agree with.
Speaker 8 (52:18):
Them, other people who are on the take with them.
Because the thing about DC, which is so interesting and
as I tell you from time to time, it can
be intoxicating, which is why I've got to make sure
to work hard to never fall into that trap, is
the culture is very insular that's why they're reacting so
(52:41):
strangely to at least to most of us, to President
Trump coming in and saying, Okay, look a lot of
you aren't going to have jobs anymore. And so within
that insular culture, it's very easy to say, well, look,
I am owed this because I am serving the public.
And there are other people that say, well, yay, you
know what, I'm serving the public too. I agree with you,
you agree with me, And this can keep going on
(53:01):
and on and on, and so it doesn't matter Democrat
Republican otherwise. Now it's not so much that you know
that they're all just singing Kumbai Ya and whatnot and
giving each other hugs. But they're able to work together
because their goal is to extract as much as they
can from us and make sure that we have as
little ability to push back on it as possible.
Speaker 1 (53:23):
Exactly, it's a whole lot. We do have some we
have some breaking news. I'm being told by the news
department that Joe Biden has actually given a speech. We
were just asking about this yesterday and he's now is
(53:44):
given a speech. We have the we have photographic proof
of it here. He was at the National High School
Model United Nations. Do you have any idea what the
National High School Model United Nations is, otherwise known as
the nh SMUN rolls off the tongue. Well, I do remember, yeah,
(54:08):
I remember being in high school.
Speaker 8 (54:09):
There's a lot of model you in and basically they'll
get students together and they will represent different countries and
they will create their own United Nations and they'll try
to basically act out what the UN does in real life.
So you have, and that's something some of the honors
kids did, So that was obviously not something that I did,
(54:30):
but that's been around for quite some time. I did
not know that there was a national association or national
gathering for Model UN, but I do know that if
you look at some of the other pictures of that
once you get back a little bit, it doesn't seem
like it was all that well attended or well promoted either.
And kind of surprising that one of Joe Biden's first
(54:51):
post presidential appearances is to go to the Model UN.
Speaker 1 (54:58):
Nobody covered this. They were making the point about this
in in even in the post that no one it
was mentioned. If you do a Google search for it,
there there may be results coming up forward now but
there were no results for this whatsoever. That he's out there,
he's talking, and no one cared. Not one news outlet
(55:24):
decided to cover this event. Uh, And which is hold on?
We got to wrap up the breaking news. I'm told,
just the Sorry, the program director is a stickler for formatics.
Speaker 3 (55:39):
Here.
Speaker 1 (55:40):
If you don't listen to her, I love that. You know,
you don't listen to her, there's hell to pay. But
Joe Biden is out there talking, and it's almost like
the the the mainstream media or beni media for that man,
is afraid to cover him now. It's like he is
uh he so yesterday that they don't want to touch him.
(56:02):
Why is that? Well, think about it. He is the
one who basically set the stage for them to go
away now, or at least in the way that they
have thus far. Look at what happened.
Speaker 8 (56:15):
Not only did he manage to mismanage an election that
they sold for him, and they did everything. Keep in mind,
they gave up their credibility, what little spread of credibility
they had left in order to help him. They did
everything possible. He screwed it up. He was an invalid.
He couldn't take the gift and run with it, and
(56:36):
that led to who they view as being their just
greatest nemesis, President Trump, coming back and actually disrupting their
way of life.
Speaker 1 (56:43):
So yeah, I don't expect that you're going to see
a whole heck of a lot from him.
Speaker 8 (56:47):
I think the most you're going to see that's positive
are some of those lame Twitter accounts where they come
out or lame x accounts where they say we love
Joe Biden, we stand with him. There's some of those
crazy people out there that's pretty much about what he's
going to get until he dies.
Speaker 1 (57:02):
One of the people that was there this was in
Nashville and New Hampshire, and the person said, I feel
like I'm at a wake. Yeah. Oh yeah. And here's
the here's that photo that you were talking about of
the the wider shot of no one being there, which
(57:26):
is I mean there is is? Yeah that is that
looks like one of his Campaigan events from twenty twenty twenty,
doesn't it. Yeah, that's weird. And wait a second, this
is the thing about this is from that right, I
(57:48):
mean this is yeah, this is no no, no, no, no,
sorry sorry Stary. This is from May twenty twenty four.
I apologize this is from May twenty twenty four, but
it's part of the story at the Gateway Pundit. So
then yeah, right, because it it does. I was gonna
(58:08):
say it looks a lot like his campaign because it
was his campaign, but the the United the United Nations thing,
and there was a there was a video of him
talking at this high school thing. Oh here it is.
Hold on a second. Let me see if I can
get this over there, because you he did the whole
mumbley uh mumblely thing when he was talking. Uh, let's
(58:33):
see here, this is the.
Speaker 6 (58:37):
Up there.
Speaker 1 (58:37):
He is right there. Here we go. Here's something inspiring.
(59:05):
You know.
Speaker 8 (59:07):
One of my good friends. I love it when he
says this. He says, sometimes bad things happen to bad people.
And you know what, Joe Biden, I just couldn't. I
don't feel bad for this guy because you know what
he knew where he was cognitively. He never should have
run for president in twenty twenty. He could have made
(59:28):
himself a king maker. He could have made himself a
quiet leader behind the scenes in the Democrat Party.
Speaker 1 (59:34):
And even though I am not.
Speaker 8 (59:35):
Here to give the Democrat Party advice, I'm happy to
let watch them burn. You know, as a citizen of
the United States, we should all be upset that he
put himself in that leadership role and put all of
us at risk financially, militarily, and so on with what
he did. So you know what, when I see things
like that, I say, hey, look that's what you earned.
Speaker 1 (59:59):
It's we're at that point now in history where it
almost feels like the Biden years were a bad dream. Almost.
Oh yeah, I mean that, well we've had here. So
it's such a different environment now with regard to Washington,
with regard to what's happening with the results that we're well,
(01:00:21):
I say results. We're seeing a lot of we're seeing
a lot of things uncovered. We haven't seen the what
you know, the the the consequences to these people for
the uh uh, for the corruption. Which that's I think
that's starting to bother some people, is that we're seeing
all of these absolutely horrible people who have taken advantage
(01:00:45):
of the system, but we're not seeing them pay for
what they did yet. Is that gonna happen?
Speaker 8 (01:00:52):
You think, here's the way to pay that, To make
them pay for what they did.
Speaker 1 (01:00:58):
And this is important.
Speaker 8 (01:01:00):
Congress has to come out and start to codify the
things that President Trump is doing. So in this next
budget that comes out, all the DOGE cuts have to
be there, and you know what, they have to make
even deeper cuts than what DOGE does.
Speaker 1 (01:01:14):
They have to do.
Speaker 8 (01:01:15):
Things like change it so that these judges can't have
immense jurisdiction to blow everything up. They can do that
because all these things are within the purview of Congress.
They've got to challenge the Democrats and Senate Democrats, just
like they did last week on the Continuing Resolution, to say, hey,
you know what, the country likes this, and if you
don't vote for it, we are going to make sure
(01:01:37):
everyone knows it's you who didn't vote for That's what
has to happen. If we take these things away from them,
that will be how we pay them back. Because here's
the thing, I sincerely doubt you're going to find enough
prosecutors and enough judges that are going to go after
every person that's been a wrongdoer over the past few
(01:01:58):
decades in Washington and either put them behind bars or
make them pay. But making it so that there cannot
be another generation of this is how we repay the
American people. And how we make sure our children and
grandchildren have an opportunity to actually live in accordance with
the Constitution and not in accordance with whatever the Washington
(01:02:18):
d C.
Speaker 1 (01:02:18):
Cabal wants. We had a dude on yesterday. He's a
frequent guest in our rumble chat room, and he has
a tendency to get in there and just trash talk.
And then we said, look, call in, and he did.
To his credit, he did call. But then he admitted
(01:02:42):
what was it Ron? He had extreme TDS, extreme TDS.
He was a GOP non trumper, right, okay, which according
to what he said, I'll take him and his word.
He also said he made anywhere from four hundred to
five hundred thousand dollars a year, but didn't want to
tell us what he did anyhow. And it's like, all right,
(01:03:03):
what is it that you hate about? Well, he has
broken the go disobeyed the Constitution. How And that's where
the that's where the conversation when you ask any of
these people where it usually stopped. How. How has Trump
broken then the rules in the Constitution? How has he
(01:03:23):
done it? Has he done it? No?
Speaker 8 (01:03:27):
And I'll say this to mister TDS out there, if
you're watching, I would say that President Trump, more than
any other president in recent memory, has obeyed the Constitution.
Because what he's done is he's made use of the
executive authority that's given an Article two for the president.
Speaker 1 (01:03:44):
That's number one and number two. He has reversed.
Speaker 8 (01:03:47):
He's done everything that you know it's said, and he
has tried to put the government back within the bounds
of what the government is supposed to do to the
extent that he can with the executive power. Now, if
you want to be upset with anybody, let's be upset
with Congress. For all these years that passed a lot
of legislation that gave more and more and more power
(01:04:08):
to executive branch departments, various presidents and Republicans and Democrats.
All the bills say things like the secretary sell this,
the secretary shell that all they had to do is
go in, pass a budget, periodically, deal with maybe a
foreign thread or two, and once in a blue moon,
once in a blue moon, you know, pass some legislation
(01:04:30):
that regulates something like pornography or something like that, and
then which they really can't do because the First Amendment,
and then go home. That's all they had to do,
but they wanted to take more and more and more
power and exceed their bounds. And if you want to
be angry with anybody, be upset with Congress.
Speaker 1 (01:04:49):
And that's always the amazing part of any argument with
somebody who absolutely hates Trump. And I understand if you
don't like the guy. Okay, you don't like the guy,
but no one can artake you what he has done.
You know. The other thing was what we've made enemies
of our allies like Canada and Mexico, and we're I
(01:05:09):
don't know how we've made enemies of them, you know,
the well, I can't even begin to understand how we've
made enemies of them. I guess he's referring to the
tariffs designed they're designed to bring jobs and industry back
to the United States, are they not. Yeah, I think
(01:05:32):
they are to a certain extent.
Speaker 8 (01:05:33):
They also are designed to be a revenue generator, because
I believe the President when he says what he wants
to do is get away from the income tax, another
one of those evil taxes, and go back to the
way the United States has originally funded excise taxes and tariffs.
And I don't understand if you're in Canada, if you're
in Mexico, China, you name it.
Speaker 1 (01:05:53):
If I told you, hey.
Speaker 8 (01:05:56):
You now have the ability to sell to the American
people with the full salaries that they earn, and the
only time they have to pay a tax is when
they get something they want.
Speaker 1 (01:06:06):
I want you to think about tariffs in that context.
Speaker 8 (01:06:08):
So if you say, hey, I want a new car,
you pay a tax that tariff. But if you say
I go to work seventy eighty hours this week and
I'm going to pull a lot of overtime in will
all that money comes to you. So you only get
government only gets something they want when you get something
you want that benefits them. So I don't know what
(01:06:28):
all the anger and so forth is about that. But
what I would also say is, while I'm a big
free marketer, you have to absolutely think if it always
made sense to move every possible operation out of the
country into every other country, what was so bad about
having it here? And why were they so unwilling to
fight things like economic excuse me, fight things like environmental
(01:06:51):
regulations that didn't make any sense, labor laws that didn't
make any sense, and so on. Why did they not
fight that rather than just say okay, well you know
my productions China, screw you. Not staying to fight has
gotten us in a lot of problems.
Speaker 1 (01:07:06):
You have to say the tit bellied fartfish. I mean,
if we if we let the tip bellied partfish become extinct,
it will have repercussions on down our genetic lines. Tell
us what's happening at the All American Talk Show. First
of all, well, All American Talk Show. We've been doing
(01:07:27):
a lot.
Speaker 8 (01:07:28):
Yeah, it's been going well, it's a lot of fun
over there. We talked about a little of everything. We
have a great segment called Moaning Joe where we skewer
Morning Joe, you know, Joe and Scarborough and Mikab Juzinski.
Speaker 1 (01:07:42):
So that's great, and we will.
Speaker 8 (01:07:44):
Be having going live six thirty pm every Tuesday, so
on your way home, wake up in the morning, get
your daily mojo in the morning, on your way home
on Tuesdays, tune in six thirty pm.
Speaker 1 (01:07:56):
Excellent, and then all Things Trains over onto YouTube as well.
So we've been having a lot of fun there.
Speaker 8 (01:08:03):
We're gonna have another episode coming out and it's gonna
I'm gonna spill the tea today confessions of a railroad lobbyist.
So I'm gonna talk about my time as a railroad lobbyist.
So if you want to hear a little bit of
inside baseball and what it's like to actually work with
a lot of the politicos and you know, get the
job done from important issues, this is the place you
want to go, and I will tell you what it's
(01:08:24):
really like to be a lobbyist. All the dinners, all
the beautiful women, all of that good stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:08:29):
It'll be right there, nice ladies and gentlemen. Phil bell Our,
Washington DC correspondent with a Daily Mojo, all around good
guy and purveyor of trains and talk shows. We will
see you again next week, my friend.
Speaker 6 (01:08:44):
Have a good weekend, Phil, see you.
Speaker 1 (01:08:45):
All right, have a great weekend and more coming away
next Here on the Daily Mojo, you the hashtag what
I learned today, but Daily and Andy here checking in
with our folks over in the Rumble chat room. Bugs
(01:09:07):
Mom says, I think Trent not Chris is jealous of
President Trump because Trump is a multi billionaire and he
never will be that rich, although he might be if
he's making four or five hundred large and good for him.
If he is, and if you can, and I'm going
to put this out there again, great risk to my
personal and professional reputations. I have any left of either
(01:09:32):
the way that you can get if you are a
person who can articulate what Donald Trump has done to
defy the Constitution and why he is as evil as Satan.
Please Bron, go ahead and put the contact thingy in there.
(01:09:54):
It's advancedbemix call dot com. Yeah, no, sorry, advanced. He
makes a call dot com. There is the calling password.
You put your name in, you put the password in
and to the We'll keep an eye on that if
you give you the same opportunity we gave Trent not
Chris yesterday. And I'm still not convinced he wasn't one
(01:10:17):
of Chris's army, because this Chris guy has a show.
What's it called ron Uh? Not a show? Yeah, it's
called not a show? Right?
Speaker 6 (01:10:27):
Yeah? I need to that effect.
Speaker 1 (01:10:29):
Yeah, And he likes to gather content from what he
considers conservative not even a show, not even a show.
You can find Chris. You can see Chris out there,
and he has other people that call into other talk shows.
And okay, you've got do you can do the same thing.
(01:10:50):
Try to be try to at least bring something to
the table, just something. I mean, if you're just gonna
spout off tds, I mean, if I get it. You
don't like him, all right, you don't like him. If
you can give something of substance, please bring it on.
My guess is because the FBI, after all of these years,
(01:11:12):
have not haven't been able to find I mean, his
income taxes. Don't you think the irs if they had
had anything, they would have come down on him like
a ton of bricks. I mean, the best they could
hope to do was kill him. I mean they're like,
(01:11:35):
well we did. We can't pin anything on him. Let's
in New York. They're like, let's didn't they have to
dig up some ten year old something and disobey the
Statute of limitations talking about overstepping your legal bounds. And
every time they have tried, I mean, grab him by
(01:11:56):
the pussy. Don't bring that one up, because, for crying
out loud, that's years ago. Now. Yeah, believe me, if
that I'd be stunned. If that's the worst thing he
ever said. Ron has said worse this morning. Yeah, you
(01:12:16):
have I don't know that you have people will believe me.
It depends on what you believe is worse than that.
Missy thirteen says, I have some questions for him. For
who for Chris? For Chris, not Trent or Trent, Trent
(01:12:37):
not Chris. Okay, probably does have an army, he says, Hey,
can I battle Chris next time on the air? Yes,
Missy thirty, you are welcome anytime. And you know who
else is welcome anytime? I just get my P thirty
eight on their tails and blow them out of the sky.
Damn straight. The old Dixter Dick Bong is always all.
(01:13:00):
He's welcome there. Uh hang on, let me find this
the tesla thing. We talked yesterday with the Brandon Morse
about the tesla's and then the stations. You know, they're
blowing up his stuff. There was a pink did you
see the pink tesla?
Speaker 6 (01:13:19):
Uh? Yeah, the cyber truck, yeah, and the guy flipping
her off.
Speaker 1 (01:13:27):
I didn't see anybody.
Speaker 6 (01:13:28):
Dude drives up next to the pink cyber truck and
he just holds his hand out the window and just
flipping her off.
Speaker 1 (01:13:35):
Oh I didn't see that one. Yeah, Now this was terrible.
And she said, yeah, your nay, and it was. My
response was anytime you pussify a truck like that, it's
a big nay from me, because it just it was like, well,
I guess it was rose, was it rose Gold, whatever
the hell it was. It was just an ugly thing
(01:13:55):
to do. It was a horrible, horrible thing to do
to a to a cyber truck. Cyber don't like cyber truck.
Speaker 6 (01:14:03):
Speaking of cyber trucks, I saw a video yesterday. You
guys know who Kyle Trump is. That's Don Junior's daughter,
the one that did the speech at the convention. She's
she's an avid golfer, but she drives a cyber truck.
And yesterday she was I guess her boyfriend or whoever
was in the truck filming her. And she looks at
(01:14:23):
the camera and she says, you want to go fast
watch this, and she freaking lays it down and that
truck go, I mean in it haul's ass. And so
she then begins talking about the fact that Elon got
this for her because her grandpa bought her the truck,
and Elon gave her a special one that hadn't even
been released yet that goes zero to sixty in two
point six seconds.
Speaker 1 (01:14:44):
Holy shanky shit, what the hell? I know, I would,
I'd think about it because the cyber truck's not a
light vehicle with the battery and it being that big
two point six seconds zero sixty. But you know what,
you've you've been up up close to them. They're not
that bad.
Speaker 6 (01:15:05):
I've been up close to one.
Speaker 1 (01:15:06):
Oh you've never seen a cyber truck.
Speaker 6 (01:15:07):
I've seen the one, but I haven't been up close
to it. Oh, but we've got a couple in town
that just drive by once in a while. But I
saw one parked at home depot. Never walked up and
looked into one.
Speaker 1 (01:15:18):
Yeah, you know, is it the European Union that still
won't Okay, some some area in Europe won't let them
in because they say they're dangerous to pedestrians because they
have sharp edges, and they do they have sharp edges.
But you know, you get I mean, how many how
many cars? You know, if you get hit by a car,
(01:15:40):
I don't think sharp edges is the thing you're going
to be worried about. Although it would hurt, but it
would hurt if I hit you with the the bull
bar on the front of micro absolutely as a sharp edge.
Speaker 6 (01:15:49):
Got the big bumper in the all that here. I
just sent you that video by the.
Speaker 1 (01:15:52):
Way, all right, while I'm waiting on that, let me
speaking the trucks and again, and this is look at
the Sage City. This is a look how big that
thing is.
Speaker 4 (01:16:04):
Let's have a look at the truck itself. Here we
have the large tires. These large tires are extrextremely expensive.
We're talking about sixty thousand US dollars a piece.
Speaker 1 (01:16:17):
Sixty thousand dollars for one tire on this truck. And
I don't even know if this is the biggest. This
is the Hitachi EH four thousand AC Dash five. It's
some sort of a mining truck vehicle. And this is
one of the things that we highlight on on the
(01:16:40):
Wednesday watch party.
Speaker 6 (01:16:41):
That freaking tire is ten feet tall.
Speaker 1 (01:16:43):
Dude, holy better be for sixty thousand dollars. Right.
Speaker 9 (01:16:48):
The truck itself is approximately four million dollars and it's
a big investment. But it's hauling approximately two hundred and
forty two metric ton of material at one time. That's massive, right.
We have this is a conventional diesel electric truck. That
means that it uses a diesel engine with a generator
(01:17:14):
mounted to the back of it, and it's creating AC power.
Speaker 6 (01:17:18):
It uses power.
Speaker 9 (01:17:20):
It's a big diesel engine and a large fuel tank
and that fuel tank's around four thousand liters twelve hundred
gallons and a massive dump tray that can carry carry
two hundred and forty metric ton of or dirt, anything
you want to put into it.
Speaker 1 (01:17:39):
Is that. I mean, just the size of that thing.
Those huge vehicles like that amaze me. I mean it's
just and those tires they have to be those have
to be solid tires, right, I mean looking at them,
they would think, so, yeah, that's gonna be like hard, solid,
hard rubber for sixty grand I would think, so, yeah,
(01:18:01):
better come with a free lunch. I mean, it's just
unbelievably massive. But we will next Wednesday, we'll do another
watch party. Uh, and we will. I just I find
these crazy videos, you know, around the interweb, and it's
fun to share them. Did you get that video? Just
(01:18:23):
want to make sure it came through. I don't know
that is that is? She's driving a Tesla cybertruck. Uh,
and it is a not released model. Let's say let's
see here, hang on a second, I have to verify.
(01:18:49):
Select two objects of the same shape.
Speaker 6 (01:18:53):
Let's see is that.
Speaker 10 (01:18:54):
This one and that one? No, that's not what it is.
Let's try it again. Select two objects of the same shape.
How about a G and a G.
Speaker 6 (01:19:06):
Look you did it. Good for you.
Speaker 1 (01:19:08):
I'm special, all right. Now back to the video which.
Speaker 3 (01:19:13):
I'm gonna win.
Speaker 1 (01:19:14):
Watch this.
Speaker 6 (01:19:20):
Yeah that was so Elon got this one for me
because they didn't make it at the time.
Speaker 3 (01:19:26):
Oh, my grandpa caught me one.
Speaker 1 (01:19:27):
She got me like the super up person.
Speaker 11 (01:19:29):
So it's zero sixteen two point six seconds, which is insane.
Speaker 1 (01:19:33):
Six seconds, yeah, zero six sure. So like my dad
is I think his cars like three point two seconds
whenever smoked him?
Speaker 6 (01:19:44):
Smoked him?
Speaker 1 (01:19:45):
Whose daughter is she?
Speaker 6 (01:19:46):
Don Junior?
Speaker 1 (01:19:49):
I want to be Don Junior's kid.
Speaker 6 (01:19:51):
Yeah, no kid.
Speaker 1 (01:19:53):
I want to get I want to get freaking out.
Speaker 6 (01:19:55):
She has a new YouTube channel where she does a
lot of behind the scenes stuff at like the at
the inauguration. And she's a golfer and she's always got
these real high end golfers golfing with her. I mean,
you're Donald Trump's granddaughter, of course, And she'll pick up
the phone and call him, hi, Grandpa, and then he's
talking to her on the channel. It's pretty cool.
Speaker 1 (01:20:16):
Wait a minute, I mean the current president acknowledges, yeah,
that he has his grandchildren.
Speaker 6 (01:20:23):
Yes, he does, absolutely.
Speaker 1 (01:20:26):
I mean it's can you imagine a president who wouldn't
acknowledge their own grand.
Speaker 6 (01:20:31):
He called him one day and said, hey, what's your
score on the back nine of such and so. Of
course he said, oh, honey, I think it's like a
whatever it was, And she said, okay, I got you
beat by two strokes.
Speaker 1 (01:20:45):
Over in the kick chat room we have there are
a couple of people watching over on Kick and Jay
Reed Junior says, hey, Ron, I'm happy to mod this
chat once we get some viewership here there you go,
all right, appreciate it. Cool, thank you. And we also
got some spam. Yeah, we get spam over there, get
spam everywhere we do. You get there's nowhere you can
(01:21:09):
go now you don't get spam. I got one yesterday.
What was the I don't even know what it was.
It just it was a text message with a PDF.
I really want to click on this pdf. Be careful,
(01:21:29):
I really want What could a PDF do? I mean,
it's not an executable file? Right? Well, no, but it
can carry it can carry viruses for Mac. Yeah for
a phone. Okay, click on it? No now, well I'm
having it. This is a discussion. And I also got
(01:21:52):
another text from some random number. USPS package has arrived
at the warehouse and could not be delivered due to
an invalid ZIP code address being detected. Please confirm the
zip code address information in the link. Please reply with
a Y, then exit a text message and open it
(01:22:13):
again to activate this link, or copy the link into
your Safari browser and open it. Have a great day
from the USPS team.
Speaker 6 (01:22:20):
Yeah, don't do that, dope.
Speaker 1 (01:22:22):
Why it's the USPS. They want us to be happy.
They have stuff for me. What if this is a
box of money? What if? What if this is the
box of a box of money?
Speaker 6 (01:22:35):
Then you can fix all the problems you're about to
have by clicking on that link. So get after it.
Speaker 1 (01:22:39):
Well, the number is plus six three nine seven seven
three three six three nine six. That seems like a
legit phone number thing from the postal service, doesn't it?
Speaker 6 (01:22:52):
Sure? Yeah it does.
Speaker 1 (01:22:54):
Speaking of legit, look at all the people in the
zoom room. Who's in there?
Speaker 6 (01:22:59):
Got a full room this morning? We got radioactive lap
up there in the top left, Timmy, Timmy driving the truck.
In the middle, free range prisoner driving his joystick and
truck in the middle. And on the top right there's
Whiskey in his truck. We got all these truck drivers.
I love this misinformation. Erica there in the middle, Kathy
and the Burg.
Speaker 1 (01:23:19):
Oh where's Sheaver?
Speaker 6 (01:23:20):
Look? Beaver got her hat on? How cute?
Speaker 1 (01:23:23):
What's the beaver driving?
Speaker 6 (01:23:25):
I don't know what beaver drives? Wisconsin, Jack Cole, yep.
Speaker 1 (01:23:30):
Man, I set you up and that's what you get. Mean. Really,
I don't know.
Speaker 6 (01:23:35):
Okay, I don't know what Beaver's driving.
Speaker 1 (01:23:38):
Wow, man, that was that was an easy one. It
was thanks to the Beave for sending me this piece
from the Gateway Pundit. Chief Justice John Roberts caught in
secretive invite only club of elite judges and lawyers that
includes James Boseburg, Beryl Howell, Emitt Metta, and Jaman G.
(01:23:59):
Jackson Brown.
Speaker 6 (01:24:02):
Put this over, so meta meta is the judge for
all the JA sixers Boseburg, of course we know about
him recently.
Speaker 1 (01:24:11):
Interesting the peace at Gateway Ponde. Excuse me, there we go.
Investigative journalist bad kitty. I think they're referring to a cat.
Oh excuse me, it's bad Kitty Unleashed reported yesterday Supreme
Court Justice John Roberts involved in secret have inenvited only
club for elite judges in DC. The secretive club is
(01:24:35):
called America Inns of Court. It also includes the aforementioned
lawyers with nicer robes. He's been man. Roberts has been
the Supreme Court Chief Justice for since two thousand and five.
And why is he in a club with a bunch
of lefties.
Speaker 10 (01:24:56):
Because they're professionals and they can all get along.
Speaker 1 (01:25:00):
That's why. What are you suspicious? No? No, I think
that the Supreme Court loves us and wants us to
be happy. That's why Chief Justice John Roberts makes so
much sense and all of the rulings that he makes
and comes out and defends Circuit Court judges who make
irrational decisions. I mean, I think it's obvious that he
(01:25:23):
loves us and wants to be happy. Uh see, what
are you? Are you questioning his loyalty to us?
Speaker 6 (01:25:31):
No? No, no, no, not at all.
Speaker 1 (01:25:33):
You better not be does a tip line I can
call your ass in. You were one of those people
who didn't.
Speaker 9 (01:25:41):
Want to move.
Speaker 1 (01:25:42):
Calling me in.
Speaker 6 (01:25:43):
You calling me in would be like going too the
scene of a d UI because one of your friends
got pulled over and you're drunkest shit, that's what that
would be like.
Speaker 1 (01:25:56):
Let me think about that.
Speaker 6 (01:25:57):
Oh I had a friend do that once.
Speaker 1 (01:26:00):
He it's okay. One of his friends called him because
he got pulled over. He was drunk as ship, so
he drove over to talk to the cop to see
if he could get her off. Guess guess who else
went to jail. I'm here, I'm here to talk about them.
Was it Dade Feeling?
Speaker 6 (01:26:20):
No?
Speaker 1 (01:26:22):
Oh, drunk dad didn't do it? No, so this club
really in the In the same piece, George Soros has
funded a fellowship at Middle Temple, where John Roberts is
a Master of the bench. Huh m. According to this
(01:26:43):
piece of the Gateway, pen, let me quickly explain how
the secret society called an American Inns called the America
Inns of Court came about. In the UK, they have
four Inns of Court that date back hundreds of years.
One of those is called Middle Temple. The US created
the American version of this in recent decades. There's a
(01:27:03):
massive list of branches. The branch many of our judges
belong to is the Edward Bennett Williams Inn of Court.
It's so secretive they deleted most signs of this branch
from their website, although they still met. Now here's Judge
Beryl Howell. She was nominated by President Judge Boseburg Rally
(01:27:25):
and VP Jimanji Jackson Brown approved her nomination. Boseburg claims
it was her work on January sixth that contributed to
his choosing her for the American Inns of Court Professionalism Award.
If it was possible to dislike attorneys more than I
already do, this just did that. Let me say the
(01:27:49):
scamp meeting info that I found, which included the DOJ
and Inspector General Horowitz in attendance, and then it goes
into do they take they take minutes from this meeting.
I'm guessing that there was a whistleblower in this sucker?
(01:28:12):
Am I right? You know what? I'm going to go
ahead and retweet this bad boy and put in the
hashtag ron again. Your sexual proclivities and desires are no
concern to me. But if you really need a hole,
I need one. If you need a good one, I
(01:28:36):
got your hole right here. Thank god it's Friday, and
I'll bet your mother had a loud bark the Daily Mojo.
It occurred to me, I've not looked in over on
the X folks in a bit katheen the burg says
(01:28:56):
cop stopping the U eyes. How dare they pekapool?
Speaker 2 (01:29:00):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (01:29:01):
Hey, Bart, I think your Post office phone number is
the same as the one alerting me about my unpaid toll. Well,
you know what, then we should actually be celebrating their
efficiency at being able to come together right now over
me when pickapl wrong, Bart, if you go to a
(01:29:26):
vegan market, you won't find any spam. Okay, Wade Robertson,
I've seen one, but I've never seen one up close.
Right Ron, that's not what Bart says, Thank you. I
think Ron, they're onto you. They are onto you like
(01:29:50):
white on rice. Where is deuce five?
Speaker 6 (01:29:53):
I don't know. He hasn't been in the chat room.
Speaker 1 (01:29:56):
I think of why. And it does not give him
the right to not attend these meetings. I think, if
you'll check the bylaws, you are still required, even on
DKA to attend the meetings of the Daily Mojo, at
least on a daily basis, right, at least one per week.
I mean, we'll let you out of a couple. But
(01:30:16):
beyond that, and if you're new to the program, and
we do have a lot of new folks, especially over
on the Rumble, make sure that you do the usual
you know, hit like, did I freeze? Or is that
just you?
Speaker 3 (01:30:28):
No?
Speaker 6 (01:30:28):
YOUU froze?
Speaker 1 (01:30:30):
That's wild. It's because I said I hated lawyers, isn't it.
I don't really hate them, Yeah I do. I mean
most of them, not all of them, most of them.
But if you are watching on Rumble or and if
you're a lawyer, I like you, so please hit like
(01:30:52):
all right, We'll get along just fine. And subscribe doesn't
matter if you're on Kick watching on Kid, you'll subscribe
like all that, just wherever you are. And if you
don't mind leaving a review, I mean, if you're going
to take the time, And if Trent not Chris is
going to do, he's probably gonna know. He's probably the
one that's been giving us the thumbs down on Rumble,
(01:31:14):
in't he?
Speaker 6 (01:31:15):
Oh it could be.
Speaker 1 (01:31:18):
Trent. I think we were very nice to Trent not Chris.
At least I tried to be I wasn't. I don't
think I was a dick to him, was I?
Speaker 6 (01:31:25):
No? No, no, no, not at all.
Speaker 1 (01:31:28):
Okay, But anyway, just like and share and follow all
that stuff. If you wouldn't mind download the Daily Mojo
app and enable notifications, you will be able to will
send you notifications about when you know what's on the
program and when we're having a special show like Saturday
Morning Live Tomorrow morning at nine am Central and ten
(01:31:50):
am Eastern time. Tomorrow's title art is Awesome. It'll be
me and Jeff Fisher. And then this afternoon at shoe
a klock Central from two to four Central time, I'll
be over with Keith and Jeffy at the mic at
(01:32:11):
the mic and we're going to be and we're going
to be talking about the pyramid stuff.
Speaker 6 (01:32:15):
Oh yeah, they ended the Big Old's structure under the pyramid,
didn't they.
Speaker 1 (01:32:21):
Again, not surprising.
Speaker 6 (01:32:24):
What's surprising to me is that it's twenty twenty five
and they're just now finding it. Is it because technology
finally got to a point where.
Speaker 1 (01:32:33):
Are they just now finding it?
Speaker 6 (01:32:35):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:32:37):
I don't know. That's the problem. And because so much
information and if you follow like uncharted X on YouTube,
any of those guys who are deep into the pyramids
and the Egyptian history and all of that, the Egyptian
(01:32:57):
dynasties and what the what the pyramids are really for
because in this latest development, but these huge cylinder cylinders
are are like two kilometers below the pyramid. The first
(01:33:20):
thing that comes to mind, it looks like power plant.
It looks like the pyramids might be the top, like
the capstone for these giant cylinder cylindrical structures underneath.
Speaker 6 (01:33:33):
You imagine that energy storage or something like big batteries. Interesting.
Speaker 1 (01:33:40):
It it's just amazing to me. We know, we know
so little about what the pyramids really were for. We
know that they're not burial chambers. Never been a body
found in a pyramid, and yet that's if you look
(01:34:01):
in the that's still what they teach kids in school.
But that's not what they're for. The most likely, I
think it's a power thing. I think it's a power
source of some sort. But you know, who knows. But
we'll talk about what they found. And somebody said Tesla coils.
(01:34:23):
These are Tesla coils. That is the exact design of
the Wardencliffe Tower, but much much much bigger. This is
it wouldn't it be wild? Thank you for your work.
There's a comment on project unity and if you don't
follow or if you don't subscribe to project Unity over
(01:34:46):
on the YouTube.
Speaker 11 (01:34:48):
It's been announced in relation to the Pyramids at the
Giza Plateau, and the plateau itself is so incredible, so
or inspiring and narrative shattering that I have been sitting
here for the last hour trying to wrap my head
around the implications of what we were just told.
Speaker 1 (01:35:07):
And some of these comments. Okay, thank you for your
work and getting the word out. This is going to
blow up and hit mainstream, will it? I don't know.
It's one of the greatest discoveries of mankind. You just know.
Graham Hancock is watching and nodding. There's another breakthrough tying
the Great Pyramids with Mars in a way never seen before,
and we should have it released next week as the
(01:35:30):
first video on our channel. They can take that technology
to the Pyramids in China, or the Giant Keyhole Islands
of Japan where we might discover more giga structures, any
other places. It's a pretty wild, pretty wild discovery.
Speaker 6 (01:35:46):
Yeah, they're talking about it being new technology that they
just that they can do that. They were able to
X ray or vision inside the pyramids and it's accurate
to where all of the chambers are, so they used
it below the pyramids and that's where they found all
(01:36:07):
of these structures.
Speaker 1 (01:36:09):
But again, is it the first time that we've become
aware of these I don't know, or is it we're
just now hearing about them. We'll see now when you
heard Island, first thing, first thing, I thought of the
Fire festival, right, because again this is another one of
(01:36:30):
those loose ends. And we talked a little bit about
Billy McFarland not too long ago and him coming back
the fire too. Is all set? Say, all set? There's
a caveat to that all set to happen May thirtieth,
so roughly two months from now, two months and what
eight or nine days? And just in case you wanted
(01:36:53):
to get tickets, don't forget. You can still get tickets
at the low low price of any Why okay, this
is like, why why did the ticket little thingies disappear
when I try to touch them?
Speaker 6 (01:37:08):
Well, click boy tickets in the top right.
Speaker 1 (01:37:10):
I tried doing that too. Uh. You can buy the
Phoenix ticket to the Fire II Festival for the low
low price of twenty five thousand dollars. Not only do
you get the festival grounds about the Pliadel Carmen. Wait
but Pliadel Carmen. This is supposed to be taking place
(01:37:33):
an Island mo Islan MoU Heades. Did they change it? Huh?
You get beautiful?
Speaker 6 (01:37:44):
Look?
Speaker 1 (01:37:44):
Oh, look at that the chablet Maroma Hotel. If you
threaten me with a good time, there's twenty five thousand
dollars for these tickets. Uh, you can buy just the
regular fuego, you commoner, for only five thousand dollars. And
(01:38:09):
wait a second, did they okay? Because this was supposed
to be happening on Isla MoU Heades. I think I
already said that. But when you check out Isla MoU Heades,
let's do it together, shall we Isla move head as? Uh?
Fire too?
Speaker 9 (01:38:29):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:38:29):
Look over here? What uh? What Island MoU Heades Tourism
board says the fire Festival too does not exist? That's weird.
You mean if you buy the tickets to the fire
to festival, which is supposed to happen on Islan MoU Heades,
(01:38:50):
that it doesn't.
Speaker 6 (01:38:51):
What's the old saying? Bread fool me once. Shame on you.
Fool me twice, shame on me.
Speaker 1 (01:38:58):
Are you suggest that Billy McFarland is a con artist.
Speaker 6 (01:39:04):
Out in the open? Yes, I am.
Speaker 1 (01:39:06):
The dude has balls as big as coconuts, does he not?
He's either just so, I mean, he either believes his
own press or he's a con man, or he is
just or he's insane. Yeah, it's it's got to be
(01:39:29):
one of those, because you don't you don't go on
a Today's Show interview unless you're he'd be a sociopath, right, sociopath.
I don't think he's a psychopath, but probably a socio sociopath.
And you go on there and say, well, you know, okay,
(01:39:51):
we don't have any artists booked yet, but.
Speaker 6 (01:39:55):
We're doing it.
Speaker 1 (01:39:55):
But but we're doing it. Let's not forget that he
because of his prison sentence and the rest of his punishment,
he can't leave New York without special permission, so he
would have to get an oki dokie to travel internationally.
So he's even said I may have to just stay
(01:40:17):
here in New York and watch, you know, a fire
festival happen, which you know, bummer. But he said, hey,
we got all you know, I'm not handling the arrangements
this time. Good. That's probably a positive. The venue is saying, yeah,
they the other the company that is that, he says,
(01:40:44):
is handling the like the The event itself is a
company called EDM No no sorry, Lost Nights. Lost Night
is the uh is the event planner, if you will.
(01:41:08):
So here's their website.
Speaker 6 (01:41:09):
What the hell was that? Wow?
Speaker 1 (01:41:12):
What an event website. It's like cirqu to slea. Let's talk.
So they do stage designed, executive production, private events, operations,
blah blah blah. Look, they've got Apple Music and Cheetos
and Tuckis and Spotify and Vulcan Vulcan tequila. That's a
(01:41:36):
music festival, I believe. Rumors is one. I don't I get.
I don't know if that's an event right there. But
we've got all that. I mean, here's where it gets weird.
Our team and there's no one there, which I thought
was a little strange. And there's nobody listed is be
(01:42:00):
on the team, which is troublesome. And then they've got
a lot of really cool pictures on their website. Let's talk,
it says, and it's uh, you got to copy right
down here. Of twenty twenty four, and according to a
(01:42:21):
piece over at EDM dot com, which is I believe
a dance music site. Yeah, I did there, I deduced
because e EDM electronic dance music. Yes, I like that lit.
That is lit? Right? Is that sick? That is sick?
As somebody say earlier, it's boss. It is pretty bitching.
(01:42:45):
Now bitching still works. I'm sorry, it's it's a bitchin
never goes out of style.
Speaker 6 (01:42:51):
If you're a boomer, no, it doesn't go out of style.
Speaker 1 (01:42:54):
I'll blow me. Uh it works. See that never goes
out of style either. H but it universal, it is.
I mean, you pretty much know.
Speaker 2 (01:43:06):
But the.
Speaker 1 (01:43:09):
It's a Mexican event company. They are the production partner.
Lord do you again? It's I mean, I know it's
two years away, but in twenty twenty seven, fire Festival
will be ten years old. Well, the possibility of fire
Festival will be ten years old. But I want to
(01:43:30):
know have they have they sold any tickets?
Speaker 6 (01:43:35):
That's a good question. It is, I mean, because remember
they had all of the all the female instagrammers doing.
Speaker 1 (01:43:45):
Oh yeah stuff Kylie Jenner, Kylie Kendall Jenner made I
think it was a quarter of a million advertagal one post.
Speaker 6 (01:43:53):
Yeah, the Emily relocation I think was one of them.
Speaker 1 (01:44:00):
You like her.
Speaker 6 (01:44:00):
I do like her.
Speaker 1 (01:44:02):
I don't know why, but you like her. It's just
disgusting the island again. Island Mouhades, has a population of
less than twenty three thousand, has a limited infrastructure compared
to other festival destinations, and according to at least one
(01:44:23):
fun fact I saw, only half of the population has
internet on this island. On this island, right, and when you,
I mean, it's a beautiful I'm telling me Elon Musk's
but he hates the people of island.
Speaker 3 (01:44:41):
Check.
Speaker 1 (01:44:41):
This is a picture of one of the one end
of the island and it's beautiful. Right, But tell me,
when you build a house down here, are you not
just a begging to be washed away? Yeah?
Speaker 6 (01:44:57):
I mean I think that goes with building a house
down there. I mean your insurance. It's got to be
freaking crazy.
Speaker 1 (01:45:02):
It's Mexico, first of all, what insurance, I guess. But
I mean, and granted, that is a be I mean
that talk about a view. Every morning you wake up
and you get to see that unreal but you're just
begging for mother nature to go watch this.
Speaker 6 (01:45:20):
Slap the shit out of it.
Speaker 1 (01:45:22):
Me, just bitch, slap the taste out of your mouth. Really,
you're going to build a house there? Oh you want
to rebuild a house? Watch this. It just doesn't make
any sense. I mean again, but it's beautiful. If you've
got unlimited funds, great, uh the uh.
Speaker 2 (01:45:42):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:45:43):
It's considered one of the safest destinations in Mexico, meaning
you probably won't walk away with your hands chopped off, hopefully.
It was ranked among the top islands to visit in
North America in the twenty twenty four Readers Choice Awards
by Conde Nast Traveler. That was following a significant increase
(01:46:03):
in tourism since twenty nineteen. And they welcome.
Speaker 6 (01:46:07):
I think I've been to the Island of Women before.
It's that what is Yeah? I think I think it
was on a cruise. It would have been farther down
that photograph though, But that's an It isn't all of
the Caribbean and all of those islands like off the
(01:46:31):
Yucatan Peninsul. They're all beautiful. But that's why people go there.
That's why it's a tourists.
Speaker 1 (01:46:37):
Huh. Well, and then the Iland of Women I did.
I don't know why I didn't know mood Heades was women.
I think they have cars on that island.
Speaker 6 (01:46:48):
Yeah, I'm sure they do.
Speaker 1 (01:46:52):
You're sure they do? Well, Yeah, quite positive they do.
Why wouldn't they cars women? Oh, they do have women.
But excuse they do have cars, but golf carts and
taxis are the primary modes of transportation.
Speaker 6 (01:47:12):
They do have cars.
Speaker 1 (01:47:14):
They do have cars. Well, I'm surprised because you can
bring a car to Isla Maheades by using the car
ferry service health you get your car here, come on
Philly uh at Punta Sam and it's a ten minute
drive north of Puertojrez. Anyway, I'm fascinated because it does
(01:47:39):
take tremendous juavos.
Speaker 6 (01:47:44):
Yeah, to to fire up something that, you know, say complete.
Speaker 1 (01:47:49):
Right here we are. We are doing this again. You
thought last time was a cluster. This time you ain't
seen nothing yet. And in just a second we will
have the speaking of women driving, women flying. There's new
information out on the Canadian jet that came in for
(01:48:12):
a perfect upside down landing, and we'll do that next
here on the Daily Mojo. Do use the hashtag what
I learned today and shoot the Daily Mojo. I don't
know who's tickling her, but space hit Hippie on DK
(01:48:35):
Where does everyone go to watch Keith at the mic YouTube?
Or you can watch on X but it's at the
mic on UH with Keith on YouTube see Wan Guru.
The Fire Cheap Beach Experience is ten years old. I
know it's crazy, isn't it. Doc Magnetos is Kylie is
(01:48:55):
a skank. Remember when the when Kylie and Kendall Jenner,
I mean when they were just when keeping up with
the Kardashians again, which credit where credit is due? Was
I thought a good show, like the first season, and.
Speaker 6 (01:49:10):
Yeah, just because it was, I mean, the first few
seasons it was all about them being a train wreck.
And then it just got old to watch.
Speaker 1 (01:49:18):
Right, you know not my dog says, bet your assets
all diagonal parking on the island. Yes, But and then
remember when Bruce Jenner he's going to be a woman.
We're like, no, you're full of ship.
Speaker 6 (01:49:32):
Yeah, because he had long hair, and and then you're.
Speaker 1 (01:49:35):
Like, holy shit, this is going to be a woman.
And and that was kind of the beginning of oh,
there's some weird stuff happening in this world.
Speaker 6 (01:49:50):
And then and then getting uh Bruce Jenner, who is
now what what's the name? M hmm, yeah, Uh turned
out to be a conservative who wouldn't who didn't dunk it.
Speaker 1 (01:50:06):
Oh, he still likes women. I said that. That's the
part that confuses me. You're going to be so you
were because I mean, I am truly a lesbian trapped
in a man's body. I think I always have been
full disclosure. Most men will get you to get you trapped,
get you into chat rooms, doesn't it?
Speaker 6 (01:50:26):
Okay?
Speaker 1 (01:50:27):
Hey see the wheels turning you and Guru what I
learned today best part of the show making holes, making holes,
making holes, making holes and donuts. Uh and coming up
with explanations for past events. Uh, the big event. We
didn't even get to the Gonzales family. We'll do that
(01:50:49):
on Monday. But because the Gonzales family just as a
little sneak preview, maybe we'll do it, probably talk a
little bit about it tomorrow. But the Gonzales family, Uh,
mother and father have been in the United States since
nineteen eighty nine and are being deported from Orange County.
They've never done anything wrong.
Speaker 6 (01:51:10):
They came here rely, they didn't go through the process
that they were supposed to.
Speaker 1 (01:51:13):
Be the mainstream. It is not telling you everything, strangely enough,
but uh so the the NTSB or the Canadian version
of the NTSB, whatever the Canadian TSB, is that what
that is? I don't know. They've come out with their
(01:51:33):
report on what happened with the jet that landed upside down.
We all remember the visual of that. This guy, I
like him. The only thing I remember about this video,
aside from you know, the plane landing upside down, was
that the because that was from a plane was the
(01:51:56):
oh f It's like yep, they had it upside down
and h and backwards. But you watched through this whole video, right,
I did? What was it? This is the big there's
the part. Yeah, that is o s thing is a
small part.
Speaker 6 (01:52:14):
Yeah, that is the right gear. They call it a stay,
some kind of stay, but it's there. There's a there's
an image further down in the video about where that
is on the right main gear.
Speaker 1 (01:52:27):
It locks the landing gear in place.
Speaker 6 (01:52:29):
Correct.
Speaker 1 (01:52:30):
It's like it's like on a folding table when you
when you pull the legs out on the table in
that little arm that goes punk, yeah and locks the
ring over it. That's what it is.
Speaker 6 (01:52:37):
That's what this is. And basically they just came down
too hard and too fast and it broke it. And
now what they're saying is they don't know whether it
had cracks in it that caused it to break. But
what they do, what they do indicate is that she
was coming down at sixteen hundred feet per second instead
(01:52:58):
of the normal I think six hundred or four hundred
feet per second. But it was a gust of wind
and then they tried to adjust for it and didn't
make it in time. But they're also claiming that the
first officer was flying the plane as she typically as
(01:53:18):
they typically do when landing, you know, to gain experience
in gain hours. But they may put the blame on her.
Speaker 1 (01:53:33):
Well, I was gonna say it's her fault, but right,
I mean yeah, but I mean at the same times,
at the same time, yes, but at the same time,
you know, aircraft do experience wind.
Speaker 6 (01:53:47):
Shears close to the ground and there was blowing snow
and wind, and so you know, they'll they'll they'll get
around to it as far as letting us know what
they felt like the issue was. They do have the
black box, the voice black box. Uh, but they're not
(01:54:08):
releasing that yet, so we don't know yet what the
conversation was in the cockpit at the time it was
taking place. But but that.
Speaker 1 (01:54:19):
That that that right, it was, I mean the whole
reason it hit the ground because all the weight came
of the plane came down on and it was how
many g's, uh, it was like three three and a
half something like that, Yeah, and they and I guess
customarily if a landing is.
Speaker 6 (01:54:38):
Like two and a half gees on both gear, it
just overstressed it and broke it. And when it broke,
the whole plane went to the ground.
Speaker 1 (01:54:46):
Yeah, which that caused the wing to share off, which
caused a big gaseous cloud the spray of the jet
fuel which ignited because of the sparks, so kind.
Speaker 6 (01:54:57):
Of slid most of the and most of it is
they slid away from the fuel burning because the wing
cheered off. And look, the fact that nobody died in
this wreck is crazy to me.
Speaker 1 (01:55:14):
I was most impressed with the fact that a in
the hangar where they have this plane, they have it
upside down, they have it as it crashed, and so
and I don't know why I didn't think about this,
but the pilot and the co pilot escaped through a
hatch in the ceiling in the cockpit.
Speaker 6 (01:55:32):
That was almost all the way on the ground. They
had to squeeze out to get out. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:55:37):
Yeah, it did not look like it would have been
a comfortable fit. But I'm not really ever considered what
it must have been like in the cockpit for the pilots.
The pilots still have the advantage of having the shoulder
harness on correct. Yes, so they were, you know, probably
a little bit more situated in their chairs. Then the
(01:56:01):
breast of the passengers, who the injuries of the passengers
were what you'd expect dropping upside down, you know, two
feet whatever it was.
Speaker 6 (01:56:12):
I see it, Tim, Tim, Tim's got a piece of
paper holding up. Say it's good landing.
Speaker 1 (01:56:18):
He walked away from it.
Speaker 6 (01:56:19):
They did walk away from it. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:56:21):
And then the there's the other thing here on this
in this video, and this guy is taking off is
the YouTube channel, and he does a good job. I
think he's a pilot. I'm not sure. But there's the again,
this thing sitting in the warehouse. I've said, look at
the look at the road rash on the side of that,
and and that, and you can see the the where
(01:56:45):
the paint was burned off, that you can see the
how you know, the the where the flame was, where
the flame was directed. It's just it's amazing to see
one of those things sitting upside down. I'm actually kind
of prize that I guess that that that engine is bent,
(01:57:07):
isn't it. Yeah, that's the tale, right, yeah, that's the tale.
Speaker 6 (01:57:11):
The tail, Yeah, the tail is fascinating sitting Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:57:14):
So anyway, so we now know that it was you know,
the I don't know if they got that part of
the landing year from AutoZone or advance Boeing Boeing. Boy,
is that going to be like the final punk in
the coffin? Who knows? But there you have it. Wait
a minutes, let's go all right there it is two
(01:57:35):
hours in the can where it belongs. The daily Mojo
for Friday, the twenty first day of March, the year
of our twenty twenty five. And let's find out what
anybody uh learned today? Over in the rumble chat room,
not my dog says roughly the speed of a long
(01:57:56):
dart Okay, Airman six cees was the pilot. Asian we
too low, Holy fuk bing tang Au. I agree. That's
still that will go down in history as one of
the best ever conversations pat on the air at a
(01:58:17):
news station. Uh dark magdido. Uh you know grew Maybe
co pilot was eating dinner instead of paying attention to flying.
Were they serving cream of something? Young guy? No, it's
the jokes keep on coming.
Speaker 10 (01:58:31):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (01:58:31):
Here over in the on the x as it were
big a pool so uh so, No fat guy escaping
from an upside down airliner. Not from the cockpit, No,
because you know that's a tiny, little, tiny little thing.
They show a photograph in there of how it was
sitting on the runway upside down, and that little hole
(01:58:53):
they crawled out, crawled out of.
Speaker 6 (01:58:55):
I mean they probably.
Speaker 1 (01:58:57):
Had a hatch, wouldn't even open all lot. Oh no,
they probably had half the hole to be able to
get out of it because the rest don't you know,
underground you would find a way out that damn hole.
Oh yeah, it's like, holy shit, this things upside down.
It could And there was a weird explosion. They haven't
been able to figure out why. After the the fire
foderator we're getting well yeah, the firefighters. Yeah, it's something exploded. Uh,
(01:59:19):
but more on that to come. See Pecan Pie over
in the Daily Mojo chat room. I'm back, dang darn
work screening employees right, tell them you're busy, Audrey says
that serious talent to Land's upside down. Thank you credit
where credit is due to the female co pilot. Damn
fine job of hold my beer. Yeah right, Ron does
(01:59:43):
it every day, every day. We don't give him enough.
We don't give you enough credit. As for the rest
of you, remember that we the people mustang together, otherwise
we shall surely hang separately. Six semper tyrannus, resist stupid
and good night. Dot Thompson wherever you are, have a
good weekend.
Speaker 6 (01:59:56):
Everybody see it
Speaker 5 (01:59:57):
You afterno The Dailymojo dot com m