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July 21, 2025 120 mins
July 21, 2025

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"Ep 072125: Tulsi The Hammer - The Daily MoJo"

Time is moving quickly, and current political sentiments echo those from five years ago. Tulsi Gabbard addresses significant issues, while President Biden announces he won't seek reelection in 2024. The conversation touches on the delayed release of the Zapruder film and the concept of time blindness. Discussions also include the implications of nuclear war, predictions about the apocalypse, and the state of electric vehicle sales versus classic cars.


Phil Bell's Morning Update - Is the hammer dropping at the NSA?:  HERE

Ron Phillips Wonky Perspective On Life - Wake Up America! : HERE


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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the Daily Mojo podcast, Justice your mojo.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
You are about to participate in a great adventure.

Speaker 3 (00:10):
Now the age what's sixty.

Speaker 4 (00:13):
He's just going to break back radio with an attitude.

Speaker 3 (00:17):
This system that we love.

Speaker 4 (00:20):
Is broken.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
I know that, dude, not comply.

Speaker 4 (00:27):
Welcome to another two hours of common sense.

Speaker 3 (00:30):
That liberty and justice for all is a myth and
euretic behavior. Want to, you can't, and when you do,
you wish you did.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
This is your daily Mojo for Monday.

Speaker 4 (00:43):
Goodness, gracious sakes, alive. It's already the twenty first day
of July. Hear of our Lord, twenty twenty five, twenty
first day of July. Already we move got like ten
days left. July is thirty one days, right, yeah, yeah, yeah,
thirty one day. So we got like ten days left

(01:04):
here in the month of July. And it's August, September, October.
We've got like five months left in the year. And no,
it's twenty twenty six. I swear we're on some sort
of a slipping slide in time. It's crazy how fast
time is going.

Speaker 5 (01:22):
It was just yesterday I was wearing a mask, Brad,
just yesterday.

Speaker 4 (01:26):
I know, And that's that's like five freaking years ago,
all of that mess happened. Are we in better shape
than we were five years ago? With regards to just
in general? Do you feel better about life?

Speaker 5 (01:43):
Liberty?

Speaker 4 (01:43):
The pursuit of yes.

Speaker 5 (01:45):
And no, Yes and no. I mean it's kind of
a niffy answer, but no, that's.

Speaker 4 (01:50):
A wish washy The wishwashy answer is what that is
right now.

Speaker 5 (01:54):
No, we're hire in debt.

Speaker 4 (01:57):
Bradley another day older and deeper in deeper in debt.
Saint Peter, don't you call me because I can't go.
I owe my soul to the company.

Speaker 5 (02:07):
Stow.

Speaker 4 (02:08):
That's very very you know, usually I have to prompt
you on, but you did very well on that. I
don't know if people like Barack Hussein Obama would see
would say that it is a better time now than
it was five years ago, when or even ten years ago,
when the whole Trump Russia gate hoax was in full swing.

(02:31):
Telsea Gabbard, speaking of swinging, has come out swinging regarding it.
And I don't know why they dumped all this stuff
on Friday, but they did. These are the documents, and
Tulsi Gabbard is here. She was on Fox on I
believe it's on Friday, explaining exactly what all of this.

Speaker 6 (02:49):
Means and enacting what would be essentially a year's long
coup against President Trump, who was duly elected by the
American people.

Speaker 4 (02:59):
And she's talking about Barack Obama, she's talking about Hillary Clinton,
she is talking about all of the crap that they
did in twenty fifteen and twenty sixteen really that tried
to cast dispersions on the character of Donald Trump, tried
to suggest that the Russians had hacked into our democracy,

(03:20):
excuse me, our democratic republic. And let me back this
up just a smidge, because she was on Maria Barbiromo's
show and just back in time here for just a moment.

Speaker 6 (03:32):
There had neither the intent nor.

Speaker 4 (03:33):
The keep here you go a second, there we go
to do so.

Speaker 6 (03:37):
Creating this piece of manufactured intelligence that claims that Russia
had helped Donald Trump get elected contradicted every other assessment
that had been made previously in the months leading up
to the election that said exactly the opposite, that Russia
neither had neither the intent nor the capability to try
to quote unquote hack the United States election for the

(03:59):
presidency of the United States. So the effect of what
President Obama and his senior national security team did was
subvert the will of the American people, undermining our democratic
republic and enacting what would be essentially a year's long
coup against President Trump, who was duly elected by the

(04:21):
American people.

Speaker 4 (04:22):
This again, remember is Tulsi Gabbard, Yeah, Democrat.

Speaker 5 (04:29):
Former presidential candidate candidate, yes, yeah, yeah for the Democrats.

Speaker 4 (04:37):
By the way, the hair there, I just there's something
just smoking hot about her hair. I don't know what
it is, because it's a skunk stripe that is. There's
just something just smoking hot about that, the skunk stripe there.
But she I mean this is could you imagine uh,
let's see, let's go back three four years. Could you

(04:58):
imagine Tulsa Gabbard coming out and saying these things about
Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton and James coming and defending Trump.

Speaker 5 (05:09):
I could not have imagined it because she was not
could the Democrat game at the time.

Speaker 4 (05:16):
Well, I don't think she saw it as a game.
I think Telsea Gabbert is one of those people to
me who doesn't seem to be she doesn't play the
game she is. I think she at least that's the
way she appears to me. She holds her beliefs deep,
holds true to her belief I don't know that she
looks at all this as a game. She seems uber
serious about all of this as being you know.

Speaker 6 (05:39):
The.

Speaker 4 (05:41):
I don't know, it's not a game to her. I
guess that's as simply as I can put it. But
for her to come out and again, this all happened
after they put her on a terrorist watch list, which
just boggles the mind of anybody with two brain cells
to rub together. They tried to take her down. They

(06:03):
put how many people did they say were watching Tulsi
Gabbard six eight twelve? Remember there were several teams? Yeah,
because and I think it was at Phoenix Airport that
remember she got because she got off one flight and
she had to get on another, and so there's another
team that has to watch her. I mean, it was crazy.
And who was the she was the uh was she

(06:26):
the president of the union, Yes, yeah she was.

Speaker 5 (06:32):
She was the Air Marshal National Council.

Speaker 4 (06:35):
Yeah. And she you know, when she came on this
program and explained what was happening behind the scenes, how
our money was being spent to follow people like Tulsi
freaking Gabbard.

Speaker 7 (06:48):
Yeah, because well in the fashion she was, all of
the air marshals were following jan Sixers and Tulsi Gabbards
and not not looking for terrorists.

Speaker 4 (06:59):
Right, I mean, it all seems that all seems like
such a distant memory, doesn't.

Speaker 5 (07:08):
Yeah, we told you like March of twenty four.

Speaker 4 (07:12):
Good lord, that's been over a year, well over a year.
And it also, by the way, I don't want to
let this anniversary. Let's see what did I do with
that piece of video? Hold on one moment, please. It
was one year ago today that we heard I'm going

(07:41):
to go with it. I'm going to go with it
and roll the dice here and see if this makes sense.
One year ago today.

Speaker 8 (07:48):
Into US from the United States and President Joe Biden
says he is stepping down from the US presidential election campaign.
He will not run in the US election twenty twenty four.
We have a statement here coming into US at Sky News.

(08:08):
I'll read that to you now. It starts July twenty first,
twenty twenty four. My fellow Americans, over the past three
and a half years, we have made great progress as
a nation Today, America has the strongest economy in the world.
We've made historic investments in rebuilding a nation, in lowering

(08:30):
prescription drug costs for seniors, and expanding affordable healthcare to
a record number of Americans. We've provided critically needed care
to a million veterans exposed to toxic substances, past the
first gun safety law in thirty years, appointed the first
African American woman to the Supreme Court, and past the

(08:51):
most significant climate legislation in the history of the world.

Speaker 4 (08:56):
Pad me this list of accomplished right, We've done such
an incredible job over the past four years with me
as the President of the United States, Such an incredible job,
all of these things we have. I mean, this sounds
like it sounds more of like an acceptance speech or

(09:19):
a cheer a pep rally to kick off his campaign.

Speaker 8 (09:24):
America has never been better positions than we are today.
I know none of this would have come or been
done without you, the American people. Together, we overcame a
once in a century pandemic, and the worst economic crisis
is the greatest depression. We protected and preserved our democracy,

(09:47):
and we've revitalized and strengthened our alliances around the world.
It has been the greatest honor of my life to
serve as your presidence, and.

Speaker 4 (09:56):
I'm hoping that for the next four years I can
be your president for for the next phase of this winning,
this success, all of the things that we've been able
to accomplish over the past four years. We're going to
keep that ball rolling down the track. He goes on.

Speaker 8 (10:11):
And while it has been my intention to seek reelection,
I believe it is in the best interest of my
party and the country for me to stand down.

Speaker 2 (10:22):
Wait what.

Speaker 9 (10:25):
All of these incredible successes, all of the things we've accomplished,
and I've done amazing work here in the Office of
the President, So I think it's a good time for
me to step aside and look Tamala Harris.

Speaker 4 (10:40):
And to say all of these things through a press release.

Speaker 5 (10:45):
Yep, I look. Sky News didn't do him any favors.
They play when he walked out in that room during
that video a while ago. Oh, his eyes were completely blank. Yes,
the dude didn't even know where he was.

Speaker 4 (11:03):
He didn't know if it was Tuesday or chocolate or
rice peeloff. Yeah, look at look at his uh, look
at his eyes. Only you need to see that look.
Huh he's got no clue. Ah, poor everybody else just

(11:26):
compared to his eyes to everybody else's, and I mean
he's like he's less lifelike. The name Walt Disney Animatronic,
which by the way, is really weird looking if you
haven't seen it yet.

Speaker 5 (11:40):
And got shut down, huh, and got shut.

Speaker 4 (11:44):
Down, got the audio Disney Animatronic got shut down.

Speaker 5 (11:50):
The Walt Disney one, yeah, really the new one. Yeah,
apparently the faish. The family didn't want him remembered that
way because it didn't didn't look like him.

Speaker 4 (12:01):
When did they shut it down?

Speaker 5 (12:02):
About two days after they fired it up.

Speaker 4 (12:08):
I did not know they shut it down.

Speaker 5 (12:10):
That was and that was news yesterday, No.

Speaker 4 (12:15):
Kidding, I swear I was just Walt Disney returns. You sure,
because that's news to me. New Walt Disney Animatronic helps
Mark Disney one seventieth anniversary.

Speaker 5 (12:32):
Yeah, let me see. I can find them story for you.

Speaker 4 (12:34):
Yeah, but I knew that the family didn't like it,
but I didn't know they shut it down. I mean
that would They weren't happy and not understandably, so, I
mean it's it looked like the uh like the bad
it looked like a bad madam to say, what's her name?
Madame Tussaud's wax Museum. It looked like the wax sculptor

(12:58):
had gotten drunk and tried to you an almost representation
of Walt Disney. Well, Ron's looking that up. By the way,
If you'd like to be a part of the program today,
use the hashtag what I learned today on any of
your social media posts and you can tag us in
it at Real Bradstags, at Real Ron Phillips. Over in
the Daily Mojo chat room, one moment, please there, it

(13:23):
is right there. Fake Zoe is in there. I love
that they think passing a gun law is good thing
for its own sake. See they're already on do something.
Hobo Jose's morning Lep cow girl, bald wait a minut?
Who's bald?

Speaker 3 (13:37):
Tho?

Speaker 4 (13:37):
The bald ape is with us this morning. Fortunate Citizen
finker Buck Ofama, peaceful creation. And over in the Rumble
chat room, Cara Boy says sky News the home of bullshit.
You don't like sky News. Sky News kind of did
a good job, not my says Bravosier at drug prices

(14:02):
were done prior to Trump taking office. Oh, it's yeah,
I know. The the trouble is that the UK public believe.
Oh yes, The point of the of that piece from
the UK from Sky News in Australia was that they
list all these increditable accomplishments according to them, and he's

(14:24):
at such a fabulous job, he's gonna step aside. Yeah, no,
I don't it. Just Florida man in Alabama says producer
Ron fails at prepping the talent again, where's the so
what have we come up with?

Speaker 5 (14:40):
I'll send it to you. Sorry, I'm answering another question
for Beth. Where is it a text message?

Speaker 4 (14:47):
Oh? I can't get that one over there. So they
shut the thing down after just two hours.

Speaker 5 (14:57):
Yeah, I know it had a lot of problems when
they dated right right, right right, But the story reads
like they shut it down because the family just didn't
like it.

Speaker 4 (15:12):
Yeah. I knew that the family didn't like it, but
I just again, I didn't realize they shut the whole
thing down. Uh video, Oh they had problems with it, Yes,
they had about it had a malfunction, so they they
stopped it, I think that day. But it's still going.
They haven't. They haven't closed the because they the family

(15:33):
knew that it was going to be happening. They were
against it.

Speaker 5 (15:37):
Was booing and all kinds of stuff.

Speaker 4 (15:40):
But it's still running.

Speaker 5 (15:42):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (15:43):
I mean, it's yeah, I'm I'm pretty sure that it's
it's still running, and it's it's odd. It's odd in
that it you know a second, what the animatronic it
it's almost it's almost there, yeah, almost. But the problem

(16:07):
is he looks like the alcoholic version of all. It's
because his face is bloated, and it.

Speaker 10 (16:15):
Just well, then you think of all the jokes and ideas. No,
I said, I don't do that. Finally, he looked at
me and said, mister Disney, just what do you do? Well,
I said, sometimes I think of myself as a little bee.
I go from one area of the studio to another
and gather pollen.

Speaker 4 (16:33):
You don't scarebe you know he's scarab booby you say
booby booby. Right. But yeah, they didn't. I'm pretty sure
they did not shut the thing down. It's I think
it was. It had a problem and they had to
close it for maybe an hour or two, but not

(16:56):
permanently completely shut down. Right, Yeah, And it's going to
it's in the main I think the opera house at
Disneyland is it Disneyland, and it's and Audrey can uh
can fill us in too, if there's an update on that.
But it's uh, it's going to swap out. According to them,
it's going to swap out between the Disney, the Walt

(17:18):
Disney story there and the presidents.

Speaker 5 (17:22):
Here's another. There's another one curtains closed, Disneyland shuts down,
the new Walt Disney Animatronics show that's on disney Dining
dot com.

Speaker 4 (17:36):
It malfunctioned right as he stepped forward to uh from
leaning on his desk. It's most technically oh, and that's
I was pretty amazed when I saw Let me see
if let me see if they show it in this
video clip, because he's he starts, I believe leaning.

Speaker 5 (17:53):
He's Yeah, he's leaning on the desk.

Speaker 4 (17:55):
He's leaning chalk on the desk.

Speaker 5 (17:57):
The thing that never moves is his left foot. Everything
else moves.

Speaker 4 (18:01):
That's where he's That's where he's connected is at his
left foot. Took me a couple of.

Speaker 2 (18:05):
Times watching Do You Draw Mickey Mouse?

Speaker 4 (18:09):
It just it's not. Everything looks great except for the face.
Everything else is great. And the word was that they
the the official Disney statement was that they wanted something
that felt like Walt Disney, not necessarily that looked exactly
like him, which is what you say when you realize,

(18:29):
oh man, this is not somebody prepares statement that is
going to make it sound like we intended it to
be this way, and it just somebody made the decision
to go with it. His face is just too pudgy.
They said. The reason that his face was so wide
was because of all the electronics that have to be
in there, and they you know, it was it was basically, hey,

(18:51):
we need all of this, the gears and the motors
and all that that kind of thing, and that's why
his face has to be out of proportion, which okay,
plus it's about two minutes long. The whole the whole
show runs like seventeen minutes, and fifteen of those are
of yeah video, and then they've got a big screen

(19:13):
behind him and over his office that somebody brought up
a great point. One of the former imagineers said, it
would have been really cool if they had had tinker
Bell go in and do the shoe little sparkly things
that fly up over his head when it goes into
the vintage part of the video, but they didn't. But

(19:33):
again that the animatronic itself is pretty damned amazing.

Speaker 5 (19:40):
Pretty damned amazing. I completely agree.

Speaker 4 (19:42):
Yeah, and if they had, just if there was a
way to incorporate I think robots, yes, SPACEXA Teslah, well,
they should have made him. That's the whole issue is
that he looks too fat. His face is too fat.
And again they said it's because of all the gizmos
that have to be up there in the cranial area.

Speaker 5 (20:04):
That I asked Groc the other day after watching this video,
I asked Groc, I said, explain to me why audio
animatronics move and flow so smoothly, where like the Tesla
bot doesn't. And it came back with the fact that
the Tesla bot has to manipulate itself, and it doesn't.

(20:24):
It doesn't use all of the it doesn't it's not connected,
like the animatronics are connected to a static point. Where
all that one more time, what so the animatronics and
so the animatronics are all connected to a static point
so they can run hoses and hydraulic flows and stuff

(20:47):
like that. Yeah, so they have smoother movements, but they're
built for repetition where the Tesla bots are built to
manage themselves, and so it's just a little bit jerkier alignment.

Speaker 4 (21:00):
But I'm sure they've got they've got the Tesla robot
that looks like Walt Disney backstage nowhearing on that. The
Disney Animatronic Show was temporarily shut down for a short
period in July seventeen, but it reopened later that day
and it has been operating as normal since then.

Speaker 5 (21:17):
Okay, oh, it.

Speaker 4 (21:18):
Has not been. It's not shut down. It just had
some glitches. I think it was the way they headlined
the story. In other words, you got sucked in by clickbait.

Speaker 5 (21:28):
Probably, Yeah, although the family does not watch the best
of it at all, No, they don't. They don't like
it at all because they said Walt never wanted to
be an animatronic, although they couldn't find evidence of that
statement anywhere.

Speaker 4 (21:42):
Right, I think if there are so many other things
that Walt Disney would hate the Disney right now, Yeah,
I agree the least the least of his concerns, as
it were. The beauty of having an animatronic like that, though,
is that you don't ever well, you know, I'm gonna

(22:03):
say it again. You don't, but you do. Really, you
need to be moisturized.

Speaker 5 (22:09):
That's a fact.

Speaker 4 (22:11):
And it's a little bit different kind of a moisturization
when you are a when you're an animatronic. But because
you need some earl sported up in there, you gotta
get that that lubric and spritzed around inside you and
on your joints and stuff. But for the rest of
us humans, you get your moisturizing cream and you're oh, yeah,

(22:36):
the lotion. I mean I've used the lotion, but it's empty.

Speaker 5 (22:41):
Yeah, we made a big purchase this weekend ourselves.

Speaker 4 (22:45):
Yeah, these bottles. Funny how these bottles will bounce when
they're empty. Yeah, we'll use this on that. Yeah, but
I used it all that's what I heard. Oh yeah, yeah,
but I used it.

Speaker 5 (23:02):
Yeah, and then apparently messed up her order, so she
needed to call Valerie this morning.

Speaker 4 (23:06):
So, well, it's concerned about the uh. I think there
was concern about the promo code, not necessarily that we
wanted to see.

Speaker 5 (23:14):
See my friends used.

Speaker 4 (23:16):
We have to order just like the rest of us. Well,
I forgot what I deal with on a daily basis. Anyway,
you can go to smell my mojo. I love the

(23:36):
way that smells. Can I smell you again? Let me
sniff you? Not in a Biden way, hm hm a,
all right, maybe in a Biden way. But if you
would uh, if you'd like to be moisturized and smell
good at the same time, go to smell mymojo dot com.
Florida man in Alabama's has brad used up all the
lotion on Doc Kittie? I did not, not all of it.

(24:01):
Cats need lubrication, don't they? As I'm told? Maybe I
was wrong, But the rosemary mint in this case empty
like my soul on the ground. We've got more on
the way. Yeah, you can get yours on the way.
To order yours today if you haven't gone to smell

(24:21):
mymojo dot com and made your order yet. If it's
been something on your list, do it today. Use the
promo code daily Mojo. You get fifteen percent off and
you'll be happy you did it because you'll be what
you'll be. Nobody likes to be old and dried out. Correct,
can't help old hell krusty? No, right, Yeah, old and
crusty is not a good Despite what you may read

(24:44):
in the papers, It's not a good thing. You can
do something about the krusty and dried out part, not
so much about the old part, as time march is
right on sooner or later it marches right across your face.
But you can get all moisturized and feel good and slickery,
which after I shaved the old nog in here just

(25:05):
and I can actually I can feel it getting sucked
up in there too when I put the body buttter on.

Speaker 5 (25:10):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (25:10):
Yeah, it's like a vacuum just sucks all that moisture
right in. It feels good too, my tan fading you
and I need to get it looks good. Yeah really,
I looks nice studs to look sexy. Yep, sure, yeah,
yeah yes, brah, Well hold on site. Get that stupid microvio.

Speaker 5 (25:37):
Like how you do it? Yeah, licking, fine there, let
me take a picture of that. Hang on a second,
gotcha all right?

Speaker 2 (25:48):
Got it?

Speaker 4 (25:48):
Yeah, send that to the agent. I love it. Go
to u smell mymojo dot com and uh use the
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Speaker 11 (26:18):
Your Daily Mojo Sunrisse, creeping lag of beef through the
flat coffee brewing black as a Monday grinding red and
run left loud on the air, The Daily Mojo week
in Us everywhere back again it again like we.

Speaker 4 (26:39):
Never let shake in off.

Speaker 11 (26:41):
The weeke and kitchen on bread with the vetter and
the musy and the Monday song red run line, keeping a.

Speaker 1 (26:52):
Strong radio with an attitude.

Speaker 4 (27:02):
We also located the rest of the pictures taken with
the fujifilm what was it called the instact uh Mini
seven s. There will be auctioning off this week here
at the Daily Mojo. I think, well, we're going to
do this on Friday. I think, okay, then try something

(27:23):
a little different, try something a little different this time,
if you if you know what I'm saying, and I
think you do slightly different. Uh. But we took some
pictures while we were in Roswell.

Speaker 5 (27:39):
The rest of the Polar.

Speaker 4 (27:46):
High packed put them on.

Speaker 5 (27:52):
They were found in a purse, weren't they.

Speaker 4 (27:59):
Anyway, So we got pictures taken behind the scenes in
Roswell of us and of Don Schmidt is some of
the guests on the program lunchtime, so I will include
the camera and the pictures, the behind the scenes and
a new role. Technically it's not a role. It's like

(28:21):
a brick box of film, film of film. And every
time I hear Fujifilm, it reminds me of a god.
This has been back in the eight forty years ago,
and a friend of mine, who was the program director
of KFI Coast at the time, was playing these audition

(28:43):
tapes that had come in for those of you or
anywhere back in the day when you were looking for
a job in radio, what you had to do was
send a cassette tape with your best breaks on it
and your best commercials and then oh I love them.
And so this one guy had sent in a commercial

(29:06):
that he had done for Fujifilm, but for whatever reason,
he kept referring to it as Fujifilm, Fujifilm, Fujifilm. So
now every time I see Fujifilm, I think Fujifilm, which
maybe they should change her name Fujifilm. In any event,
we'll auction this off on Friday Live. I believe what

(29:31):
could go wrong.

Speaker 5 (29:35):
That's the fun part about doing a live show. What
could you go wrong?

Speaker 4 (29:39):
I mean, what could what could possibly what could possibly
go wrong? Uh, Pam BONDI is going to uh, well,
in theory, she's going to be releasing more files from
the Epstein situation. What was it in hang on and

(30:00):
say we've got We've got President Trump giving her the
old addible and standing behind her. She's she's not going anywhere, apparently,
and neither is Bongino apparently. But uh Trump has come
out and said the following. The Attorney General's handled that
very well.

Speaker 2 (30:21):
She is, she's really done a very good job.

Speaker 3 (30:24):
Whatever she thinks is credible she should release.

Speaker 4 (30:30):
Has she done a good job? I because I don't
really think she's done that great a job on the
Epstein thing. However, Comma dot dot dot the I think
the real question is what, what and who are the
forces behind the resistance to release the files, the tapes,

(30:57):
the video whatever. There's something there's some force pushing back
that will probably never know. We'll probably never know who that.
I mean, we can speculate who the and it's not
necessarily names that we'd recognize, but it's the power behind
the power, yes, with the money wams that will never

(31:19):
I think there's a lot of backscratching across the aisle
going on here.

Speaker 5 (31:23):
That's my opinion.

Speaker 4 (31:24):
Uh.

Speaker 5 (31:26):
And and everybody's like, well, if Trump was in the
list or was in trouble, why why did the Democrats
bring it out? Because there's Democrats on the list? Dumbass.
I think there's Democrats and Republicans on the list, and
neither one of them wanted to come out. And Trump's
being pressured to do something, So what did he tell
her to do? Go to the court and see if

(31:47):
they can release the freaking grand the grand jury testimony,
so transcript.

Speaker 4 (31:55):
This will likely go down in history much like the
jfk assassination, which we've known, which.

Speaker 5 (32:04):
We've known we've no, don't Yeah, we've known that, not really,
And there's been all.

Speaker 4 (32:13):
Kinds of tapes and interviews and people have come forward
say that they've been the second shooter. There's two or
three people that I know I've seen in documentaries that say, yeah,
I was a second shooter. And and he says, I even,
uh left the bullet casing, so I would always put
a tooth mark in the bullet casing. Is I've left
that bullet casing right there? On the fence at the

(32:34):
top of the grassy knoll. Maybe he did.

Speaker 5 (32:38):
Maybe Well.

Speaker 4 (32:41):
JFK is still dead and we may or may not
ever know who the second shooter was, but chances are
really really good that there was a second shooter from
the front of the car. And who is it? What
would they call her, the Babushka lady.

Speaker 5 (32:58):
Yeah, she was the She was standing in the grass.
She had the umbrella, right, she was standing the umbrella.
I think it was across the street. Yeah, I think
she was wearing a scarf on her head.

Speaker 4 (33:10):
The lady, the Baboushka lady. And she was the Babushka
lady unidentified woman present during the sixty three assassination of Kennedy.
Who speculated, okay that so she had the other camera
because I remember seeing there's somebody across the street with

(33:33):
a video or a still camera that they don't have
they don't have the film.

Speaker 5 (33:38):
Yeah, they can see.

Speaker 4 (33:39):
That she's they've got the film. Maybe they've got the what.

Speaker 5 (33:44):
Was what was it nine years before There's a Pruder
film came out.

Speaker 4 (33:49):
Yeah, before it was released, and it was Heraldo Rivera
that did it on his show ten years later before
any of us got to see the Zeppruder film. Apparently
it was shown at conferences and things like that through
the during that ten year period across the across the country,

(34:09):
but not nationally and not on television for ten years,
which is that's a long time. I mean, that's the
equivalent to, you know something, a different view of the
escalator during Trump's time in office. Somebody would that's the
equivalent of somebody saying, Ah, by the way, I've got

(34:30):
another another angle of Donald Trump coming down the escalator
and he's holding a gun and we're just now seeing it.
That would be the same amount of time we've got
between the assassination.

Speaker 5 (34:42):
We've got eight or nine years before another angle of
the Butler Pa shooting comes out.

Speaker 4 (34:48):
Yeah, And will we ever get the the real story
on that, doubtful. Just she was seen holding a camp
by eyewitnesses. She's visible in the Zapruder film even though
the shooting had already taken place and most of her
surrounding witnesses took cover. She can still and that was

(35:10):
the other thing. She was still standing with the camera
at her face. So she had either was a professional videographer,
because that's what they do. They tend to like not
take cover, they'll run into burning buildings. After the shooting,
she crossed Elm Street and joined the crowd that went

(35:30):
up the grassy knoll. She's last seen in photographs walking
east on Elm. Neither she nor the film she may
have taken have ever been positively identified. Uh huh, so
will we ever know? Probably not. If you are a

(35:51):
person who is chronically late, there is hope for it,
well is there now? There's not really hope, but at
least we know what it is that makes you late.
It's called time blindness. At least there's now a name
for your condition, so I'm sure that sooner or later
insurance companies will be covering your condition. It's a health

(36:13):
issue called time blindness. It's often misunderstood as an inability
to perceive time. The condition disrupts a person's ability to
estimate how long it will take to complete tat. I
swear I suffer from that. I have time blindness.

Speaker 5 (36:29):
Some people say that can adhd adhd or is halftime blindness?

Speaker 2 (36:36):
Is that I've never heard that.

Speaker 5 (36:37):
I just recently found that out.

Speaker 4 (36:41):
I've had adhd for.

Speaker 5 (36:44):
For years, and it beats me down. How long have
you had it as far back as I can remember.
Let me back that, say, let me back up and say,
probably really bad since.

Speaker 4 (37:01):
Nineteen ninety I've had since nineteen eighty nine.

Speaker 5 (37:05):
Yeah, so you're older than me, So that's okay.

Speaker 4 (37:09):
Yeah, it gets worse with older people. It's horrible, horrible.
It disrupts your ability to estimate how long a task
will take to complete, and in daily life, time blindness,
they say, can manifest as miss deadline's difficulty transitioning between
tasks or underestimating how long that task will take, resulting
in stress and frustration. Socially, it may be interpreted as

(37:33):
disrespectful or careless behavior toward others, potentially damaging relationships, as
in the spouse who can never be ready on time.
The cardinal feature of time blindness is an inability to
estimate a time interval. It can negatively impact a person's
ability blah blah blah. Laurie Singer, who is a board

(37:55):
certified behavior analyst at Lori Singer Behavioral Service Ye, Laurie's
what are the odds of Lori Singer being at the
Lori Singer Behavioral Services Company? I mean that had to
have been like talk about that is crazy. What are

(38:18):
the odds of that happening? She reiterated that those with
it's called time agnosia. That sounds even better time blind.
It sounds I like tim time agnosia is I like
that term better. I think that's how you pronounce agnosia,
isn't it agnausea?

Speaker 1 (38:41):
Is that?

Speaker 4 (38:41):
What I don't know is that, Uh, let's see if
they can. Let's see if we have our friendly pronunciation
chick agnosia. Let's say it's here we go agnosia agnosia,
So agnausea agnosia agnosia. Thing has agnosia agnosia. It doesn't

(39:06):
really sound like a word anymore.

Speaker 5 (39:07):
Is that like your time agnostic? You don't really care?

Speaker 4 (39:15):
That's not what an agnostic is. Though it's not that
they don't care. I guess there's unsure of it, unable
to commit. Typically struggle with knowing how much time has
passed or how much time is remaining during a task.
Always that would always be my worst and still is
how long is it going to take you to finish
that shit? I don't know, five minutes, ten days. Absolutely,

(39:40):
somebody may miscalculate how long it takes to get ready
in the morning, running out the door and arriving late.
And even there are some people who if well, that's
the old adage that any task will expand proportionally to
the time allotted to it. So if you give yourself
two hours to get ready, it's going to take you
two hours and three minutes to get ready. Yeah. Others

(40:02):
may get absorbed in an activity, a symptom known as
hyper focus, losing track of time completely. That's that can
happen to Sorry, honey, I was here working at the
office until three in the morning.

Speaker 5 (40:15):
But you know, time blindness works the opposite direction as well,
in what it will that you're way early, which is
usually my case. If I have to go to the airport,
I'm usually there about three hours before my flight, just
so I don't have to worry with all the other
mess that goes with getting there just on time.

Speaker 4 (40:37):
It's being smart, maybe because you don't know. There's so
many there's so many unknown.

Speaker 5 (40:42):
I'll set at the gate for two hours waiting. I'd
rather do that, I guess I'd rather do that than
be run in to the gate to catch the flight
at the last.

Speaker 4 (40:52):
Minute, or bring old morning updates from Phil watch them.

Speaker 12 (40:57):
This is Phil Bell on the Daily Mojo Morning Have pap. Now,
if you've listened to me long enough, you know that
there are very few things that actually offend me. But
one of the things that did was what happened in
twenty seventeen when the so called intelligence community and many
of the intellectual class in the United States went out

(41:18):
and said that I and millions of my fellow Trump
supporters only supported the president because we were told to
by ads being placed on social media by the Russians.
If you've forgotten, this is the Russia Russia Russia hoax
which was used to tie up so much of President
Trump's first administration. Now, what's so beautiful is that Tulsa Gabbert,

(41:41):
who was a Democrat candidate for president in twenty twenty,
has exposed the hoax for everybody to see. Of course,
you and I knew that was always just a hoax, obviously,
But the fact that now you have names like James Comy,
James Clapper, and even people like US Senator Mark Warner
getting skewed in the public, either for their involvement in

(42:03):
this or for their continued defense of the lie, that
shows that what happens in the dark will come out
in the light. If we the American people, stay involved
and engaged with our government, we can force not only transparency,
but we can force accountability.

Speaker 4 (42:20):
So kudos to all.

Speaker 12 (42:21):
Of us who have stood firm, stood by our beliefs
and never ever wavered and put those beliefs into action
by electing people like President Trump who would do what
it takes to make this a reality. So what I
want you to do is enjoy this moment. Let all
of those so called intellectuals who told you way back

(42:42):
in twenty seventeen that we were just rubes who were
taken for a ride, let them know that the jig
is up and they are going to have to live
with the reality of the situation. I also want you
to leave a comment under the show, let us know
what you think, and don't forget to download the Daily
Mojo smart phone app and enable notifications that will be
up to date on the latest craziness and good stuff

(43:05):
coming out of Washington, d C.

Speaker 4 (43:07):
And you'll know how to share it with others.

Speaker 12 (43:09):
Stay sharp, stay strong, and stay free right here on
the Daily Mojo.

Speaker 1 (43:13):
Bill Bell's morning Update is only on the Daily Mojo.

Speaker 3 (43:24):
The Daily Mojo, Whoda thunk.

Speaker 4 (43:48):
All these years later, still be talking about the Washington Commanders.
Trump has now threatened to block a stadium deal unless
the Commanders restore their old name, which would.

Speaker 5 (44:03):
Be the Red red Skins.

Speaker 4 (44:07):
Yep, he said yesterday he would block a stadium deal
for the Commanders unless they returned to their former name.
It's been five years since they dropped it in twenty
twenty after criticism that it was offensive to Native Americans,
even though it was in fact a Native American who
came up with the name Redskins. Hey, the Washington whatevers

(44:32):
should immediately change their name back to the Washington Redskins
football team. He said the team would be much more
valuable if it reverted to its original name, warned of
potential restrictions if the team refused to do so. And
I think this is just another shiny object Trump.

Speaker 5 (44:51):
Can he block them? I mean, that's a state.

Speaker 4 (44:54):
They reached a three point seven billion dollar deal with
with DC on April twenty eighth to have the team
move back to the capital because they're where they are
now in Arlington, then know where they are. The agreement
would see the team play at the site of the

(45:15):
Memorial Stadium RFK Memorial Stadium, which is going to be demolished. Finally.
That thing has been sitting there empty since it's been
it's been a few years. It's just sitting there because gridlock,
which is good in some cases because as long as
as long as they're not doing anything in DC, that

(45:35):
means they can't f anything up, right, But as soon
as they start moving, stuff arounds them. But they're finally
going to demolish RFK Memorial Stadium and then this new
stadium would be they break ground in next year and
complete it in twenty thirty. They're doing that right now.
In Nashville, they are tearing down the old stadium which

(46:02):
was originally called Adelphia Coliseum. That's been that long ago.

Speaker 5 (46:08):
Who plays there the stadium?

Speaker 4 (46:10):
Is that the Titans?

Speaker 5 (46:12):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (46:12):
Yeah, let's see the Adelphia Stadium was here. It is,
I mean Adelphia, and it hasn't been called Adelphia since
Adelphia went out of business, which was unfortunate. But let
me see if I let me see if I can

(46:33):
make this bigger for you. There it is. Uh, there's
the Cumberland River right there, there's the General Jackson showboat.
And I remember when they started building that stadium here
by the way, right there at the top this area,

(46:55):
where'd my cursor go? Hold on a minute, my computer
again forgot that there was another computer. This right here
is the AT and I guess it's AT and T building,
or it's the phone company building. That was that the
dude tried to blow up with his RV. He parked
the RV right right between There's second Avenue runs right

(47:19):
between this set of buildings and that building right there,
and that's where he had parked his RV, which when
it blew up, these three four, maybe five buildings were
heavily damaged in the explosion. He's trying to he was
trying to blow this building up for whatever reason, and

(47:42):
it got.

Speaker 5 (47:44):
Pissed off enough at AT and T. You want to
blow him up? I get it.

Speaker 4 (47:46):
But well, do we ever get the full story on him?

Speaker 5 (47:52):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (47:52):
Nope, we didn't. I mean, arguably he was probably just
a nut job, but I don't know. But anyway, that
those buildings, and they are still arguing in Nashville about
the reconstruction of these buildings because the owners of the
building they wanted to bring them back as historically accurate

(48:17):
as it could be. But if you've been down there,
you've seen how badly they were damaged. I mean to
the point where the entire front third of these buildings
was just gone. It crumbled, And there's really, I mean,
there's no economically feasible way to restore those buildings other

(48:40):
than to tear them down and start over again. But
they're locked in a struggle right now between the owners
and the Historical Commission, which, on one hand, I understand,
because Nashville tended to tear shit down without any regard
to its historical significance. That happened down on Second or

(49:04):
I'm West End when Beamon Toyota, where I bought my
first truck, they just bulldozed a studio that was behind
their dealership where I think it was Heartbreak Hotel was
recorded by Elvis and then went on to be the
location where they filmed Crook and Chase, and they're like, yeah,

(49:25):
we'll just mow it down, and they put up a
parking lot. It's like, but now they're arguing over this,
so who knows, but this this stadium here when they
started building this in the late nineties, which has now
been what thirty years ago, which isn't that really long.
If you asked me for a football Stadium, But they're

(49:48):
tearing that one down now and they're building one right
next door to it that looks like a giant box.

Speaker 5 (49:54):
Yeah. Our static splash this morning has the the new layout.
It's gotta it's gotta cover on it, apparently.

Speaker 4 (50:06):
So that's the new layout for Washington.

Speaker 5 (50:09):
For Washing Yeah at the Command, well, the Commander Stadium
is what they're calling it.

Speaker 4 (50:13):
Right if yeah, if if if that's what it ends
up looking like.

Speaker 1 (50:17):
The new.

Speaker 4 (50:19):
This is the theoretically the new Titans Stadium, which, well,
that's nice, is it?

Speaker 5 (50:30):
Look? I mean when they built when they built a
Cowboys stadium in Arlington, Texas, that was pretty impressive at
the time. And I mean, what is it now, ten
years old? Eight years old, nine years old? I don't remember.

Speaker 4 (50:46):
Oh, it's it's probably twenty Is it really the Cowboys Stadium? Yeah,
because I did at the time. I was doing videos
for the National Centers Construction, Education, and Research two thousand
and nine. Okay, wow, I was is that when it opened?

(51:09):
So when did they start construction on it?

Speaker 5 (51:15):
Oh? I think it took him four years, three years,
four years. I remember it was like before they put
the four billion or some stupid something or another.

Speaker 4 (51:26):
It was amazing. When I was there, it was before
they had put the covered roof panels on, and we
stood up in the in the upper it was actually
oh kitty, But wow, this the crane accident happened like

(51:47):
two weeks after we were there, and I was watching
a dude hang upside down from that track painting. Wow,
it was crazy in that stadium. It was just amaze
balls when they when they built that. You're absolutely right.
Did you ever get do you ever get.

Speaker 5 (52:07):
To go to a game in what? What was it
called the stadium Titans Stadium in the Dallas Cowboys Stadium
when it was in Dallas, it was called something else.

Speaker 4 (52:22):
You mean the old stadium?

Speaker 5 (52:23):
Yeah, the old Cowboys when they tore down. Yeah, that
was over there off of never Texas Stadium. Sorry, Texas
Stadium is what it was called.

Speaker 4 (52:35):
Okay, Yeah, I can't where was it? I can't even
cross there.

Speaker 5 (52:40):
There is a where's the big sign where one eighty
three and six thirty five I think come together? It
was right in that right, yep?

Speaker 4 (52:48):
But where was it in there? Was it over where
the the that looked like a parking structure was being
demolished or was it where that sign thing looking is.

Speaker 5 (52:59):
Well, it was in the v where the two highways
came together. It was on the west side of one
eighty three, And.

Speaker 4 (53:08):
Every time I go by there, I'm like, I can't
I can never figure out where the hell of the state.

Speaker 5 (53:11):
Anyhow it was. I went to a couple of games
there back in the early two thousands, but that seeing
that thing disappear, because I grew up with that thing there.
So I mean, but these stadiums, what do they keep
them for? Twenty years or so? They spend billions of
dollars year and then they blow them up and then
blow them up, and.

Speaker 4 (53:30):
It's crazy. I mean, I would have thought that the
stadium in Nashville would have lasted a little bit longer
than going on, what twenty five twenty six years, But yeah, nope.
And then it's usually the taxpayers who get hit with it.
But then the argument as well, it's going to bring
all of this business to downtown and BLib andy blah,

(53:50):
and I guess it does. But it's a different kind
of game at that level. It is, I'm a monetary game, whole,
big different kind of game, something else that keeps getting
built over and over and over again are the holes
that are appearing at Yellowstone. We talked about the migration

(54:10):
of or what looked like the animals all running out
of Yellowstone, which I'm told is a happens every year.
We always see the animals running every it's the end
yearly running of the animals. Okay, maybe it is, but
they seem to know things we don't know. But this
as a science alert is calling it a gaping hole

(54:33):
full of milky blue water.

Speaker 5 (54:35):
That's what it looks like.

Speaker 4 (54:37):
Oh yeah, baby has appeared now at Yellowstone. They made
in April. Apparently the park geologists made their first visit
to the Norris Geyser basin. They found a new feature
they hadn't seen before. It's a brand new thermal pool
and it's pretty How big is that?

Speaker 8 (54:59):
It?

Speaker 5 (55:00):
At least there's nothing to do it is.

Speaker 4 (55:05):
It's bigger than it looks. It's thirteen feet wide, okay
four meters four meters wide. It's filled with milky light
blue water. And this, I guess happened about the same time.
We played the video last week of the people running
YEP from the explosion. And that's been a year, right,

(55:30):
is that was that? I think it had been a
year since they had done that, and so this was
let's see this, this happened in the last six months
because in December twenty twenty four there was no sign
of this hole. And remember they're not when when Yellowstone
gets ready to blow, they're not going to tell us

(55:53):
they are. Nope, probably not a good It's not going
to happen. Nah, they're not gonna because what are they
gonna tell? What are they gonna say? And Jody won
twenty one. I'm with you in the Rumble chat room,
says new hot Tub. Yeah, I mean if you can
withstand one hundred and sixty degree water, an original babe says,
but listen to the animals. They know what's going on.

(56:14):
I agree, but somebody, and there was somebody in one
of the chatrooms, say yeah, we deal with this every year,
but everybody's paranoid that the animals are. Okay, you say so,
but I'm going to listen to the animals, Uh, James,
and let's see James. Louisiana says, I went to kindergarten
while my dad was stationed in Newburgh, New York. Once

(56:36):
he got out of recruiting and transferred to signal I
don't know what they're talking about. I thought I did.
Where is it? Where is it talking about union stuff?

Speaker 12 (56:47):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (56:48):
Uh?

Speaker 4 (56:48):
Is it digital currency? Original bebe? I think they have
add over in the rumble chat room. Oh that's what
they're talking about. Ironically, my whole life diagnosed in kindergarten.
My teachers want him to drug me with riddlin. I've
tried riddle and I didn't like it. It was weird.

(57:10):
Uh time blindness. I stopped and I told you to
stop doing that or it would happen. See what she
did there, She's making it into a sex joke, right crazy?

Speaker 10 (57:24):
Uh?

Speaker 4 (57:25):
And uh? Butler who said something about Butler about the
Butler pa incident, Epstein list, et cetera. I feel like
they know people are asking questions and they're in damage control.
Missy thirteen says, yes, it's but here's the weird thing.

(57:47):
You know, Trump's approval rating has gone up. You would
have thought that this would have dinged his approval rating. Nope,
it is not. Yeah, which I'm am I surprised. Maybe
I'm not because I still trust the guy I and

(58:13):
the reason I trust him I've said this before. The
reason I trust him is because people I trust trust him.
I know Bongino trusts him. I trust Bongino Ergo by
extension Trump and and has Trump done anything to ding
my trust in him, even with the even with the

(58:36):
Epstein thing. My thought process is process is that.

Speaker 1 (58:41):
He is.

Speaker 4 (58:44):
Doing these things for a for a reason. Like when
when he came out and said, uh, you know you're
still talking about Epstein? What what are we still talking
about him for? That's when you saw the Democrats go no,
wait a minute, no, now we need to release the list.
It's almost like he baited them into coming out for
the lisbe. So it's like everything he does I think

(59:08):
he does for a reason, and even things that we're like,
wait a minute, why do he I think there's always
a reason behind that.

Speaker 5 (59:14):
And I think on both sides of the fence you
get you get Democrats and Republicans both at any point
in time, depending on the path of the conversation, are like,
release the list. You got to release it now. Those
are the people who aren't on the damn list. Look
at the other ones who are not calling for the
list to be released.

Speaker 4 (59:36):
Right, It's I don't know, I don't it's I'm I'm again,
I'm willing to wait until the whole thing plays out,
and we've got something else going on at the same time.
It's summertime, and people are traditionally during the summer people
are not that hyper focused on politics because you've got

(01:00:00):
so many other things to be doing out there that
it may be that people just aren't paying us close attention.
And there's been such a hyper focus on politics for
the past however many years that a lot of people
are just exhausted at this point, present company included, and
it's like, all right, let's let's just see how it
plays out. Let's think about something else for five minutes.

(01:00:25):
And that could be what's going on as well. If
you if you don't pace yourself, you end up, you know,
being sick in more ways than one. Your brain gets tired,
your body gets tired. You need a little damage control done,
which is why it's a good idea to know about

(01:00:50):
Doctor Steller's Mojo is just it's just Sells tells. Stella'smojo
dot Com. That is the what we in the biz
call the vanity you are l to get you into,
uh doctor Stella Emmanuel's website Stella'smojo dot Com. And it

(01:01:11):
is your She is your one stop when it comes
to things like ivermectin. If you are having a problem
getting your ivermectin, if your doctor still looks sideways at
you when you said, hey, I'd like to get some ivermectin,
I get a new doctor. But that's just me. Go
to stella'smojo dot com and you can get your ivermectin.

(01:01:32):
And it's a good it's it's a good thing to
have in your medicine cabinet just in case, because you
never know when they're going to start whooping out the
new viruses. You never know when people like Anthony Faucher're
going to rear his uh molish little head again and
start releasing new contagions on the world. Remember, we have

(01:01:57):
to stay vigilant. Now, it's not it's not like it
used to be. Where we go Glad that's over. Now,
we can relax and rest. It's never gonna be that
way again. I hate to tell you, but it's never
gonna be that way again for you on the youthful
side out there, and by youthful I mean under fifty.

(01:02:20):
Keep up your stamina. You're gonna need it. Those of us,
those of us staring death in the eyes. Ron knows
what I'm talking about. Those of us who have been
around for a while, and it's like, I'm so tired,
I just.

Speaker 5 (01:02:37):
What was it? Song?

Speaker 4 (01:02:38):
And sometimes some sometimes death feels like sweet poetry. It's
the new birthday song. I have to play that again,
by the way, but it does. There are days when
it's like, man, that feels like it's going to be
such a nice rest. But if you're not ready yet
to die and you want to stay healthy, if you're

(01:02:59):
gonna be here, or you might as well be healthy, right,
And sometimes that takes the extra oomph that something like
ivermectin cake. I love this. I know it's a it's
a stock it's a stock image. But the image on
on the website right there, I guess I should point
out here. Yeah, she it's just Jesus, looks so happy.

(01:03:23):
They're spritzing it into her mouth. That's the covida spray
or covida spray. It's the ingestible mouth spray for immune support.
And then she then she looked just happy, splits in
it in her mouth.

Speaker 5 (01:03:37):
That's way I used to look shooting Banaka in my
mouth at school. Remember that what was his name Banaka.
I see what he did there.

Speaker 4 (01:03:47):
You're welcome. I couldn't. That was too easy, and you
stepped right into it. I did. Go to stella'smojo dot
com and get your ivermectin today or whatever you feel
like you need to stay.

Speaker 5 (01:04:02):
Here's a wide raise of products she does for you
to look at.

Speaker 4 (01:04:06):
Has a brand.

Speaker 5 (01:04:08):
I'll ordered some for you so it'll be there. Did Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:04:12):
Oh good? Is it the am I gonna be?

Speaker 5 (01:04:15):
It's the emphastiction me? Yeah, we we can take a
picture of you doing that.

Speaker 4 (01:04:21):
Who doesn't like a little sprits in the mouth every
now and then? Am I? Right? Yeah?

Speaker 5 (01:04:25):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:04:25):
Come on, get sprints yourself in the mouth. Go to
stella'smojo dot com Stella'smojo dot Com Radio.

Speaker 5 (01:04:55):
Monday.

Speaker 4 (01:05:01):
You did I a pin? I mean, I'm looking at
the rumble chat and I have two pinned messages from
Original Baby? Did I do that? I don't know? I
don't know what it says, refuse. I can't figure out

(01:05:22):
if that's me or if those are a pin by
somebody else. Sorry, Grandpa, you'll figure you'll figure it out.
Original Baby says this faut he's still alive. Jeez. The
Banaka Blast. Dark Magneto says, Banaka Blast. I remember the
Banaka Blast. If you've not downloaded the Daily Mojo app,

(01:05:46):
you're in for a blast. Do it, do it now?
And uh no one, as I say, gets hurt. Plus,
you'll be able to send us messages through the app.
And it's much much easier, uh than you know, trying
to send me smoke signals. Althose there are times when
that would be a little simpler. I'm looking for the
picture that in a moment, there was a picture on

(01:06:13):
Saturday of there. It is of Kim Jong un on
the beach because they've reopened. I guess a resort in
North Korea for tourists. And who doesn't want to go
to North Korea. Who's a tourist in North Korean vacation?

Speaker 8 (01:06:29):
Right?

Speaker 4 (01:06:29):
Well? Sure, who wouldn't want to be a tourist in
North Korea enjoy all the fabulous fun sight.

Speaker 5 (01:06:36):
I'm just North Koreans that are touring the beach because
they don't let people in, do they.

Speaker 4 (01:06:42):
Well, didn't this guy over here look Chinese? Oh you
were about to say, it's hard to tell.

Speaker 5 (01:06:50):
It's hard to tell. They all look at it.

Speaker 4 (01:06:52):
It's hard to tell they all look alike, don't they
Deuce five? I mean this guy over here can Japanese,
who knows. But my big point was, man, is that
Kim jong UN's sister? Because I'm not gonna lie. She's like, hey,
now you doing, and I was like, well, that can't
be Kim jong UN's sister. She just she looks too

(01:07:17):
sweet and cute, cudley. And it turns out that's not
his sister, that's actually his daughter. You can you can
see the resemblance if you, and and thank you Vince
for sending me the message in the uh on the
app and letting me know, because on Saturday I was like, man,
I just don't remember Kim jong UN's sister looking that

(01:07:39):
cute and cuddley. She always looked more like the you know,
killer type. So just saying that's his uh, his daughter,
not his sister. So uh, if you are curious as
to when the world is going to end, we can
uh uh well maybe we can't. But there is a

(01:08:02):
woman who says that she knows her name is Cassie.
I don't know, we know her last name. Her username
is Cassie a PS seven, and she and her husband
have been doing tiktoks, and some of them have been

(01:08:24):
about the spirit that they've been talking to since twenty thirteen,
going back what twelve years almost to the day, back
in July twenty thirteen when they decided to whip out
the Ouiji board and you know, mess around with it,
which some people say, you don't mess around with Luigi board.
You never know, And I've played with Ouigi board, and yes,

(01:08:49):
I don't think you necessarily need a Ouigi board to
flirt with hal bad Juju, Hell, the Devil whatever, But yeah,
you can pretty much flirt with the gates of Hell
using a paper cup if you are that fascinated with it. So,
this entity that they've been talking with since July of

(01:09:14):
twenty thirteen communicates in English, but it will also spell
out ancient languages words in Angel. It also will use
binary code sometimes it communicates backwards. That's interesting. The couple
drilled down for more information and they asked exactly what

(01:09:36):
must be done in order to prevent the coming apocalypse,
the message being that all must stop or Earth will die.
All it stop? Yeah, right, and do you you know
what you.

Speaker 2 (01:09:56):
Want to know?

Speaker 4 (01:09:56):
What must stop?

Speaker 6 (01:09:58):
What?

Speaker 5 (01:10:01):
St U p I d All stupid must stop. Well
we're screwed.

Speaker 4 (01:10:09):
What have we been saying on this program?

Speaker 5 (01:10:11):
We're forever.

Speaker 4 (01:10:15):
Resist stupid. We have been, we have been trying to
prevent these end of the world Sadly, you're right, Ron,
it's never going to stop. You can resist it. But
I don't think stupid and you and but this is
also proof that you cannot. You have to. I was

(01:10:37):
going to say, respect stupid in large numbers. Yeah, that's
the right word. Never underestimate the power of stupid in
large numbers. Yeah, therefore you should respect the fact that,
in large numbers, stupid can really f up your day.
On July twenty fifth, of it doesn't say what year

(01:10:58):
it was seven. Who is this ghost, this entity that
they've been talking to, says a first contact failed twenty
four thousand, eight hundred and twenty five ago. Is that
twenty four thousand days? No? No, no, it's saying it
must be days? How many hey, siri? How many years?

(01:11:21):
Is twenty four thousand, eight hundred and twenty five days.
Twenty four eight hundred.

Speaker 13 (01:11:27):
Twenty five days is sixty seven point nine seven years?

Speaker 5 (01:11:31):
Okay, there you go.

Speaker 4 (01:11:34):
That was the day the Hiroshima bomb was dropped. Oh,
so it knew something the second time that seven got
in touch with them, tracing back to October twenty seventh,
nineteen sixty two, that was when nuclear war was narrowly
avoided in the Cuban Missile crisis. So apparently it's it's

(01:12:02):
going to This may come as a shock to some people,
but it's going to be nuclear weapons that bring about
the apocalypse. Is that a shock?

Speaker 5 (01:12:14):
God did say that the world would end in fire
this time.

Speaker 4 (01:12:20):
You'll be wishing for a flood when it comes around
this time. Out of curiosity, they asked who was going
to die when the coming apocalypse happens, and the reply
was all so and in the only the clue that

(01:12:50):
was given as to the date, they would not say
what the year was, but apparently the day is May
twenty seventh. No, if that's hold on a second, hey, siri,
huh oh, I love that you have to wait. Just
because I didn't say I loved you, I said I

(01:13:14):
love that. I have to wait until you say uh huh.
I ask you a question, is she gonna say nope? Uh? Hey, siri?
How many days until May twenty seventh, twenty twenty six?
It's three hundred and ten days until then. All right,

(01:13:35):
if twenty twenty six is the year, Yeah, if twenty
twenty six happens to be the year, you got how
many days you say, three hundred and ten? You got
three hundred and ten days to get all your your
affairs in order, which may or may not include and
I is our Hey, I don't want to give it
the fecal touch. Yes, so all right, good goods. I

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Speaker 5 (01:15:53):
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Speaker 2 (01:16:38):
Your Thanks.

Speaker 3 (01:16:48):
Monday, your.

Speaker 5 (01:16:57):
Little thanks all going on.

Speaker 4 (01:17:01):
The button looked different, but it felt good, that matter,
and it did feel good. I think his name is
Gron Philips. Yeah, I mean, so as I was traveling
through the highways and byways of West Texas last week,

(01:17:24):
and we were all happily driving along in our cars.
This particular vehicle right here, she is a a twenty
eleven Tundra, and that that was like one of the
I think that was the first year that I got her.
And and then not much less we were driving.

Speaker 5 (01:17:44):
Different on it nowadays, except it looks a little bit
a little bit of different color.

Speaker 4 (01:17:49):
That's yeah, I mean, And then she was she she.

Speaker 5 (01:17:52):
Was a road hard and put.

Speaker 4 (01:17:54):
Up west she was, Yeah, she was. And so as
soon as I took the picture after she turned over
two hundred thousand miles. One of the first people that
got the text was Jerry Reynoldsley car pro like I
know who will totally appreciate this picture. And sent it
to Jerry and I said, hey, let's talk next week

(01:18:15):
about cars. I'm talking about I don't know cars. Hi, Jerry,
how are you hey?

Speaker 3 (01:18:20):
Brad?

Speaker 14 (01:18:21):
Yeah, I was tickled to death to see that you
got that two hundred thousand miles. And guess what, like
I told you in the text, you probably got a
lot more than that.

Speaker 2 (01:18:30):
Still to come.

Speaker 4 (01:18:31):
Oh oh, I think so. I told you why I'd
sold my ninety two, and back then they didn't have names.
It was just a high lux four by four and
it was a five speed, and when I moved to Texas,
it wouldn't pass emissions in retrospect. I even knew at
the time. I think it was just an oxygen sensor.
But I sold it, and I wish I hadn't sold it.

(01:18:54):
It had three hundred and eleven thousand miles on it,
and that was on the little V six. Those V
six are great. Literally, the three vse is that what
the engines are, That's what it is.

Speaker 14 (01:19:06):
I mean, yeah, but I'm with you on the six cylinders,
and unfortunately they're kind of going away, are they really?

Speaker 6 (01:19:14):
Are?

Speaker 4 (01:19:15):
Six cylinders not being produced as much.

Speaker 14 (01:19:18):
Now, not nearly as much. Everybody's going to four cylinders
with turbos, or they're downsizing from V eight down to
six cylinders with turbos. I mean even Toyota with the Tundra,
if you got a new Tundrad today, it would be
a six cylinder. They don't even offer a V eight.

(01:19:39):
And it all started with Ford, That's true. Ford started
back in twenty ten with the Eco Boost family engines
that everybody's heard about. They still offer a five liter
V eight, but the majority of people are buying the
three point five liter six cylinder with twin turbos.

Speaker 2 (01:20:00):
Uh.

Speaker 14 (01:20:00):
And and you know those guys that are big V
eight guys like we all grew up being, we're gonna
have to We're just gonna have to get over it,
because this sixth cylinder in the Tundra, it's got more horsepower,
it's more fuel efficient, and it's got a lot more torque,
So you just got to get behind the wheel and

(01:20:21):
give it.

Speaker 2 (01:20:21):
A try, and if you do, you're probably gonna get
to six.

Speaker 4 (01:20:25):
Well, I saw this this headline over at Car and
Driver that the land Rover Defender ninety and the Lexus
LC five hundred they are going to be only available
with a V eight and that in an era of
engine down sizing an increased hybridization. So it's kind of
weird that you see a V eight is bucking the

(01:20:48):
trend which used to be the standard, and now it's like,
I guess an alternative.

Speaker 2 (01:20:58):
That's what you got soon.

Speaker 14 (01:21:01):
Yeah, you got two very limited vehicles there. I mean,
they're not trying to do any volume with those. Where
they're doing the volume is with the six cylinders.

Speaker 2 (01:21:12):
And you know, I don't. I still love a V eight.

Speaker 14 (01:21:16):
I've got a Mercedes with a six hundred and three
horse V eight under the hood that I just love.

Speaker 2 (01:21:22):
But the truth is they're going away.

Speaker 4 (01:21:26):
Well so, but you said the V six is though,
once you get behind the wheel of them, you'll be
sold on it. Really, I mean, do they feel they
feel like a V eight or do they give you
the same power and very much?

Speaker 14 (01:21:39):
I mean you d have the Tundra of the Sequaria
with the six cylder hybrid engine. It's putting out four
hundred and thirty seven horses, but the torque is in
the five hundreds. And if you know, if you like
fast takeoffs, torque is more important than horsepower. And they
have got really yet if you're driving it like you're

(01:22:02):
supposed to, which I don't but some people do. I hear,
and the mileage is better. I mean, you pick up
one mile per gallon with that hybrid, but you're getting
more horsepower. What's what could be better?

Speaker 4 (01:22:17):
Right?

Speaker 1 (01:22:18):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:22:18):
The the Tundra when I first bought it, it was
four years old. I think I got it in twenty fifteen.
It had eighty five thousand miles on it and the pedals,
the gas pedals on those, and I had driven a
couple others and they were the same way. You couldn't
finesse it, and you you try to finesse it, and
then next thing you knew, your foot was halfway in

(01:22:40):
it and the thing would take off and you'd burn
rubber off the line because I guess it just had
too healthy a spring on the pedal itself. But you know,
what's the point in having a V eight if you
can't have a little fun with it every now and then.

Speaker 14 (01:22:55):
Oh, I'm with you one hundred percent. I still love
the sound of a big V eight, you know. And
that's been one of the problems with adaptation to electric vehicles.
Now I've driven one. I had the new Dodge Challenger
and Chrysler which is now Stilantis, spent millions of dollars

(01:23:20):
to come up with an exhaust sound for an electric
car that actually sounded like.

Speaker 2 (01:23:27):
A big exhaust, right, And I kind of offed at it.

Speaker 14 (01:23:33):
And then I got one for a week for review
and I heard it and I went, Holy cow, this
is amazing. And it really is. I mean, when you
get on this thing, it sounds just like a V eight,
but it is a full gas I'm sorry, it's a
full electric car. But it's putting out, you know, six

(01:23:56):
hundred and some odd horses. You know, it's just lightning fat.
So you know, they they've tried to make the electrics
a lot more user friendly, if you will, but unfortunately
America's just rejected them.

Speaker 2 (01:24:14):
And I made to swap swap talk topics on you,
but no, no, no, you know, it's an electric car.

Speaker 14 (01:24:20):
That Chrysler felt like of a eight. I mean it
felt like it felt better than a V eight. I
was amazed.

Speaker 4 (01:24:29):
I love the sound of a good, healthy throaty V
eight engine. Always have going back to high school when
Ron Orner had nineteen seventy and a half Firebird Formula
four hundred, and that thing it had a cam in it,
that would just I mean that bittered a bubba b
bub bah bah bubbah bah bubba. If there's just something

(01:24:51):
about that sound and that feeling that is awesome. And
if it's like a drug, if you like it, you
of it, and if you don't, it's like I hate
that noise. But you know, for men, uh, it's Ron
has a what what kind of truck do you have?

Speaker 6 (01:25:10):
Ro On?

Speaker 5 (01:25:11):
I've got a GMC eighty four. It's a it's a diesel, yeah,
six points six.

Speaker 2 (01:25:17):
Yeah, but that's a great Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:25:20):
His exhaust you're didn't you exaust was the previous truck, Brad,
I had a I had a Borler cat back exhausted
on that one. But it sounded good. I love this,
it really did. And uh, and Ron gets tired of
his vehicles. Solter a two years he's he's off onto
something new. He has a a rich wife, so there's

(01:25:40):
nothing wrong with that.

Speaker 2 (01:25:42):
Well, I tell you, guys, what the trend I'm seeing,
which you know, technology changes everything, but the smaller engines
putting out more horsepower.

Speaker 14 (01:25:53):
That that's been amazing. I have right this minute, sitting
downstairs in my parking lot. I have a Mercedes Benz
with a four cylinder. It's an suv. It's the GOLC.
It's one of their compact SUVs. But a four cylinder

(01:26:14):
that's putting out six hundred and seventy one horses.

Speaker 4 (01:26:18):
Wow, Holy snike. Wow, that's a meaning.

Speaker 14 (01:26:23):
That was great horsepower for a Corvette five years ago.
And now we're talking about a four cylinder suv. It's changing,
and it's changing fast. But the industry had to I mean,
they had to get more fuel efficient under the previous administration,
and now everything's going back the other way.

Speaker 2 (01:26:45):
In fact, we know now.

Speaker 14 (01:26:47):
Gerald Motors just announced they were changing a plant, an
assembly plant that was all electric production, to build more
V eights. So what a swing in the pendulum. And
I feel sorry for the automakers because they can't change

(01:27:07):
their production overnight. It's we're talking years a couple of
years for a major change to take effect, and they
had they had Biden and now they've got Trump and
they both have completely different outlooks that are shaping this industry.

Speaker 2 (01:27:24):
And they also know it could go.

Speaker 4 (01:27:26):
Back the other way right in just for years. Well,
and was it at the beginning of Biden's presidency, didn't
they all come in where we seeing meetings with all
of the heads of the of the automakers. Was that
him or was that Trump? I can't remember, but it
was like one after the other. They all came in

(01:27:47):
there and they're meeting with the president. And you're right,
I mean they have to be ready to pivot on
it at a moment's notice, because sadly, cars have become
pulled like everything else, and so they don't know what's
what is which way the wind is going to blow
and they have to be ready to do anything. It's

(01:28:08):
no wonder cars cost eighty thousand dollars now, I mean,
there's there's so much technology and again they have to
be ready to pivot at the stroke of a pen,
which sucks.

Speaker 14 (01:28:21):
Yeah, And the EV mandate that the Biden administration tried
to shove down everybody's throat was it's going to end
up costing automakers, and I mean multiple billions of dollars
because they're going to have to scrap everything, not because

(01:28:43):
of a change in administration, but because America rejected it.
And I said all along from the very beginning we
may get to ten percent electric cars.

Speaker 2 (01:28:55):
We never got there, and it's.

Speaker 14 (01:28:57):
On the decline, and it's going to decline when the
seventy five hundred dollars federal rebate, which never should have
been there in the first place, when that goes away
September thirtieth, then sales are really going to plummet. So
that that was a phase that the auto industry had
to go through. It was mandated, and it's going to

(01:29:21):
cost them a lot of money. And there's been a
lot of startup electric car companies that are gone now
and there'll be more that are gone.

Speaker 4 (01:29:31):
What what percentage of the market now have evs captured?

Speaker 14 (01:29:38):
We're setting at about seven and a half percent. That
the best we ever got to was eight percent. I
think it'll be more like five percent after the seventy
five hundred dollars goes away. And that's okay the automakers
as long as things aren't changing on them. They can adapt,

(01:29:59):
and they can adapt to the that's kind of stuff
pretty quick. They'll drop their EV production, which all of
them already have anyway, because the dealers wouldn't buy anymore.
And you know, when you're talking about automakers, they only
have one customer, Brad, and that's their dealers.

Speaker 2 (01:30:17):
Unless you're talking about Tesla.

Speaker 14 (01:30:19):
Testa is different because they have they sell direct to
the public, although they don't hear where I'm at in Texas.
But you know, if you look at what happens, they
have been shoving these electric cars down the dealer's throats
now for over a year, and it's coming to an end.

(01:30:41):
So the seventy five hundred is going away, and that
is going to change the entire landscape of electric cars.
And I think they will eventually just drop down to
that five percent. They'll build a few some of the
big ones term motors forward may get out of the
electric business all the way around and leave it to
the Tesla's and the Lucids and the pole Stars of

(01:31:05):
the world to make them. Toyota has been resistant on
electrics all along. They've only made one. They put all
their money into hybrids, turned out to be a brilliant,
brilliant move, and they are the rewards of that right
now while everybody else tries to catch up.

Speaker 2 (01:31:23):
It's it's been fascinating to watch.

Speaker 4 (01:31:26):
Oh yeah, and it's it's ironic in that if you
go back one hundred years, electric cars were the thing
until the you know, the the internal combustion engine, and
I guess pretty much just the oil and gas industry
at the time were able to convince people, hey, this

(01:31:46):
is a better way to go. Whether or not it was,
I don't know because I wasn't alive back then, but
I mean it was, you know, there were more electric
vehicles then then there were gas engines, and oh yeah,
it didn't It didn't stick then and it's not sticking now.
But I love, like you said, the Toyota. We have
the hybrid that you recommended, the RAF four, and that

(01:32:10):
thing is bad ass. I love that that that vehicle.
It's it gets great mileage, it's snappy, it's it's comfortable,
it's and you know, Toyota just makes winners. But that
that's been their winter, right, I mean, that's been their
their bread and butter.

Speaker 14 (01:32:29):
Recently, oh, they started they started hybrid production twenty seven
years ago. And that's why when somebody on the air
asked me about a hybrid, it's I'm going to recommend
to Toyota or Alexis every single time because I know
they do it right. I know that battery is going
to last two hundred and twenty five thousand miles at minimum,

(01:32:53):
and that's just that's what I see every single day.
So you know, there's a lot of hybrids out on
the market. Now, how are they going to be as
time goes on.

Speaker 4 (01:33:03):
I don't know.

Speaker 14 (01:33:05):
I know that I'm comfortable recommended to my listeners a
Toyota or Alexis. I'm not comfortable with some of the
newer hybrids because we don't have the history yet. So
if you want a hybrid, I say, get yourself a
Toyota Alexis. Now the new thing, of course, is the
plug in hybrid, and that's a whole different ballgame. Also,

(01:33:28):
i'm driving one now. Besides that Mercedes, I've got Evolvo
XC sixty plug in hybrid that I'm reviewing.

Speaker 2 (01:33:35):
It's very nice.

Speaker 14 (01:33:37):
You can drive thirty five miles on pure electric, and
that's great. If you've got a short commute every day,
you got a ten mile one way commute, ten miles back,
you're going to be on electric. You'll never see a
gas station again. Get home, plug it in. You're good
to go five hours later for the next day. But
if you want to go cross country, you just use

(01:34:01):
the gas engine. And that's the difference between an electric
and a hybrid. And that's why America Buy and Large
has rejected the electric cars because they can't go anywhere
in them.

Speaker 2 (01:34:14):
You know, you can't take a vacation in them. It's miserable.

Speaker 4 (01:34:19):
And plugging it in, don't you find that to be
a pain in the ass.

Speaker 14 (01:34:24):
Oh, it's a lot less of a pain. Then going
to the gas station. Trust me, put your credit card in,
waiting on that thing, pushing the right buttons, put your
ZIP code in, get the pump, get smelly. Now plugging
ow an electric car.

Speaker 2 (01:34:41):
I have one out.

Speaker 14 (01:34:42):
Admittedly it's a third car and it doesn't get driven much.
But the charger is mounted on the wall in the
garage right next to where I park. I get out,
plug it in. It's done in five seconds, and I
you know, I go back out the next day it's
completely charged. No, it's it's really simple. But you know,

(01:35:04):
you got to have larger and you got to play
in your trips. And there's pluses and minuses to everything. Brad,
we all know that it's just a different way in
the car.

Speaker 4 (01:35:17):
James and Louisiana commented the the auto stop. Yeah, the
stupid auto stop system sucks, and that we had a jeep.
We rented a jeep I think when we were in Hawaii,
and it did that when you pull up at a
stop light.

Speaker 5 (01:35:37):
That and she hates it.

Speaker 4 (01:35:38):
Oh what it it'd be good for the engine.

Speaker 14 (01:35:43):
I knock every car I review. This's got the start stop.
If it doesn't have a button to turn it off,
I can live with it. If there's a button. But
a few years ago, especially General Motors was filled in
a lot of cars.

Speaker 2 (01:36:00):
You had no choice.

Speaker 5 (01:36:01):
That's her only thing you could do her cap you
can't turn it off.

Speaker 12 (01:36:05):
Now.

Speaker 5 (01:36:05):
My truck was the other truck that we were talking
about earlier was a GMC with the auto starting stop.
But it I could turn it off, and I did
every time I got the truck, I just punched them.

Speaker 14 (01:36:17):
And you know it's if it's got the button, you
get into a habit. So it's a two stage start process.
You hit the start button, you hit the off button
on the start stop. But good news is John Duffy,
or National Transportation Secretary, has came out and said, we're

(01:36:38):
going to do away with those things. We think they're harmful,
we think they do more harm than good. And I agree,
by the way, and so they're going to start phasing
those out. Thank goodness. They say it picks up ten
percent fuel economy. I've tried it both ways. I can
see absolutely no benefit to it whatsoever. And if you're

(01:36:59):
in a place like I am in Texas where it's
going to be one hundred this afternoon and your engine
cuts off, they say the air conditioner works as well
when the engine's off.

Speaker 2 (01:37:14):
No way it does. Anybody telling me that, no, yeah,
don't buy.

Speaker 4 (01:37:20):
The other What's the other harm that it does? I'm curious,
I'm d I know it's but no, if Duffy was
saying it does more harm than good, does he talking
about the environment? Is he talking about the what what's
the other harm that those stops starts do?

Speaker 14 (01:37:34):
I think he's really talking about environment. The cost of
the system that it adds to the car is not
helping anything. And then from an emission standpoint, your car
is going to put out more emissions the minute it
starts back up. And you know, I expected to see
starter failures, flywheels failures, maybe battery failures due to the

(01:37:57):
start stop. Truth is, we haven't seen anything as far
as the start stop hurting the life.

Speaker 2 (01:38:06):
Of starters or anything else interesting. That's what the bottom
line is. It's adding to the cost.

Speaker 14 (01:38:12):
It's an annoyance, and if it's not doing any good
for fuel economy, why have it?

Speaker 2 (01:38:19):
And so it looks like we may be approaching the
end of those things. They drive me crazy.

Speaker 4 (01:38:26):
That's why I'm surprised to hear that it doesn't affect
the life of starters, because that's but isn't it true
that the that your engine takes the most abuse basically
when it gets started. That's that's the problem, that's the
wear factor on most engines, and to do that repair
and that's flywasy.

Speaker 14 (01:38:47):
I've really been watching flywheels and the effect that you know,
start stop has on the starter and the flywheel. Because
starter is still a fairly relatively cheap repair. But you
start talking about replacing a flywheel, now we're talking some
big money.

Speaker 2 (01:39:03):
There's just been no evidence that. That's the fact. I've
been very surprised. It's still a noise. Man. I hope
it goes away right right?

Speaker 4 (01:39:10):
That is that is weird. I'm surprised at that as well.
And I think, what another thing that they got me.
And I was thinking about you when I saw it
where it was the an ad for the Hummer, the
all Electric and you've done a review over at carpro
dot com. It looks really really cool, is it? I mean,

(01:39:36):
does it perform as well as it looks?

Speaker 2 (01:39:41):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:39:41):
It does.

Speaker 14 (01:39:42):
It was amazing, really and I'll tell you right now
if if you're going to go an electric, if you're
going to go all electric, first thing, you want to
do it before September thirtieth. Secondly, I think Jero Motors
is putting out the best electric product there is, including
that Hummer. That thing was absolutely amazing. The torque, the acceleration.

(01:40:07):
Uh just last week had the Cadillac Escalade all Electric.
It was the darnedest thing I've ever reviewed. I absolutely
fell in love with it. It was super fast. It's
the first vehicle I have ever gotten five hundred miles

(01:40:29):
of range.

Speaker 5 (01:40:30):
Out of Oh I was going to ask and the
range was.

Speaker 2 (01:40:34):
Well, Cadillac said four sixty. I got five hundred and
I wasn't trying.

Speaker 14 (01:40:39):
I mean I drive when I review a car, especially
an electric, because there's so much fun, I drive them hard.
And I got five hundred miles of range. Now, wow,
that Cadillac and the.

Speaker 2 (01:40:52):
Hummer we're talking about.

Speaker 14 (01:40:54):
These things weigh four and a half tons. Yeah, we're
over nine thousand pounds with both those. And the main
thing is the battery weight. When you got a battery
that large, that will feel a vehicle.

Speaker 2 (01:41:10):
Yeah, that's just mammoth. I mean it's just massive.

Speaker 14 (01:41:16):
Then the battery is going to weigh a lot. And
you know the thing I worry about with vehicles like
that is our infrastructure. You know, your driveway at your
house wasn't built for a nine thousand pound vehicle to
set there overnight.

Speaker 4 (01:41:34):
It's good the park.

Speaker 5 (01:41:37):
In downtown roads.

Speaker 14 (01:41:39):
As all roads, yeah, I mean any road for that matter.
It's you know, yes, that that Hummer was amazing. I
wish I could stamp my fingers and have one anytime
I wanted it, because it'd be right at the top
of my list.

Speaker 2 (01:41:56):
But the reality is, you know, it's like every other
electric out there, we're not selling very well.

Speaker 5 (01:42:03):
You know.

Speaker 14 (01:42:03):
They came out of the gate selling our hotcakes, just
like every other electric car. The market cooled off. Now
they're they're having to give them away. The dealers don't
want them, people don't want them.

Speaker 1 (01:42:16):
You know.

Speaker 2 (01:42:17):
It's it was a nice fad while it lasted.

Speaker 4 (01:42:20):
But it's over nine thousand and sixty three pounds one
hundred and seven thousand, one hundred and forty five dollars.

Speaker 9 (01:42:31):
Wow.

Speaker 4 (01:42:32):
Yeah, that's that's wow.

Speaker 2 (01:42:34):
That's that you get seven governments from the government.

Speaker 4 (01:42:38):
Yeah, that's a Yeah, that's a laurel and hearty handshake.
Jerry Weddell's the car pro. Carpro dot com is the website.
Anything you'd like to do, anything else you'd like to
tell everybody, send them somewhere.

Speaker 8 (01:42:57):
You know.

Speaker 2 (01:42:57):
If you're going to get an electric get it man,
you know, and if you want one, get one. I
have one myself. I enjoy it. It's not my daily driver.

Speaker 14 (01:43:09):
But if you're gonna make that transition, you need to
make that move really quick, and you need to watch
if you're in the market for a new car of
any kind. The tariffs are just now starting to take effect.
We're starting to see price changes because of the tariffs.
It's going to get worse as we go on, as

(01:43:30):
the manufacturers transition from the twenty twenty fives to twenty
twenty six is we know there's going to be some
really hefty price increases there. That's the time of year
that cars go up anyway. So the manufacturers have done
really good job, Brad holding the line on prices so far,
but that's about to change.

Speaker 2 (01:43:51):
If you're going to buy a car this year, pull your.

Speaker 14 (01:43:54):
Time frame ahead and go ahead and pull the trigger
this summer. You'll save money.

Speaker 2 (01:44:00):
Promise. It's great to be with you and producer Ron again.

Speaker 4 (01:44:03):
It always you are welcome here anytime, my friend. I
look forward to the next time. Carpro dot com is
the website. Jerry Reynolds the car Pro always a pleasure.
We'll talk again soon, thanks Jerry. Wow. And now I
know right, and so it's going to ful. But if
you're if you're thinking about buying a car, get it

(01:44:24):
now before you have the extra pain, especially if it's
going to be good. One hundred and seven thousand dollars
for a vehicle. Hi.

Speaker 5 (01:44:34):
I used to say that's a small house, but not anymore.
I mean you can't get a small house for listening.

Speaker 4 (01:44:39):
No, you too, you get it. You can get a
tiny house.

Speaker 5 (01:44:42):
You can get a tiny house.

Speaker 4 (01:44:43):
Need tiny house. And now something from Ron?

Speaker 5 (01:44:46):
Right, Yeah, we talking about the Obama and Gabbard stuff
on this week's Twizzy.

Speaker 1 (01:44:53):
The way I see it, this is Ron's walky perspective
on life.

Speaker 5 (01:44:59):
Oh here we go again, folks, the Obama era, that
golden age of hope changing. Oh yeah, shoving the Russia
boogeyman down America's throat like it's Thanksgiving stuffing. Tulsi Gabbard's
out here dropping truth bombs on Fox, saying Obama's Russia
obsession was all about one thing, screwing over the American people.
And you know what, She's not wrong. This whole Russia

(01:45:21):
Russia Russia stick wasn't about protecting us. It was about control, distraction,
and keeping the Deep States paws all over our freedom.
Let's break it down. Back in the day, Obama and
his cronies were waving the Russia flag like it was
a Mattador's cape, screaming about election meddling and putin hiding
under every ballot box. Meanwhile, what were they really doing

(01:45:42):
Pushing narratives to keep a scared divided and distracted from
their own failures. Economy sputtering, blame Russia, Hillary's emails leaking
faster than us, Siev, Russia did it forgot to take
out the trash. You guessed it Putin's fault. It's like
they had a blame Russia button on speed dial. They
mashed it harder than a kid playing Mario Kart. Gabbert's

(01:46:03):
calling it what it is, a deliberate ploy to subvert
the will of the American people. They wanted us paranoid,
glued to CNN and begging for more government oversight to
save us from those pesky hackers in Moscow. Newsflash, the
only thing hacking our democracy was the swamp's obsession with power.
They didn't care about truth. They cared about keeping us
in line like sheep herded by a drone with a

(01:46:25):
DNC logo and the kicker. While they're yelling about Russia bots,
they're ignoring the real threats like big tech sensoring conservatives,
or the border being wide open for anyone with a
backpack and a dream. But sure, let's all lose sleep
over some Russia dude tweeting memes from a basement in
Saint Petersburg. Priorities right. Thank god for people like Gabbard

(01:46:46):
who aren't afraid to call out this nonsense. The Russian
narrative wasn't about security, it was about manipulation. And if
you bought into it, well, I've got some motion front
property in Arizona. I want to talk to you about
Wake Up America. The real threat it's not in Moscow.
It's in the mirror of a government that thinks it
knows better than you. I'm Ron Phillips, and that's the

(01:47:06):
way I see it.

Speaker 1 (01:47:07):
The way I see it, it's only on the Daily
Mojo dot com, the Daily Mojo.

Speaker 4 (01:47:34):
Original bases. I bought my twenty thirteen Toyota Yaris in
twenty seventeen for fifty five hundred dollars.

Speaker 5 (01:47:43):
Not Yaris, man, those are little little, little little tea tiny.

Speaker 4 (01:47:50):
It's a little bit of a vehicles there. Jody won
twenty one. How hard is it to put out an
EV car? An EV car fire compared to a gas car.
That's good question. And the question is, or the answer
is it is more difficult because you got those the
batteries that if you've ever seen them try to put
one of those out. They generally just let them burn out,

(01:48:11):
I think, because you almost can't put out an evy fire.

Speaker 5 (01:48:18):
What got that car? Right of god? Oh that's nice.

Speaker 4 (01:48:21):
I'm glad you asked.

Speaker 6 (01:48:22):
That is.

Speaker 4 (01:48:25):
The Rolls Royce. I think it's LaRose noir droptail. Pretty,
isn't it?

Speaker 5 (01:48:33):
That is pretty?

Speaker 4 (01:48:34):
How much do you think that is?

Speaker 5 (01:48:37):
One hundred and eighty nine one hundred.

Speaker 4 (01:48:39):
And eighty nine thousand. Yeah, you were close as the
most expensive car in the world in twenty twenty five.
It is thirty million dollars?

Speaker 5 (01:48:48):
Are you kidding me?

Speaker 4 (01:48:51):
There's one's not thirty no?

Speaker 5 (01:48:54):
Hell no, I mean even if I was rich, that's
a little bit rich. Thatgatti car got a bidet in
the freaking driver's seat.

Speaker 4 (01:49:04):
What the hell better have soft hands? Bugotti?

Speaker 5 (01:49:08):
Lo lo?

Speaker 4 (01:49:09):
What noir? Is sixteen or excuse me, eighteen zero point
sixty eight million dollars. Let's see if I can show
you a picture of the Bugatti. Ooh, oh, it's almost
worth it. Hang on a secde just In looks alone. Yeah,
I can doc in. So let's see. Here here comes

(01:49:31):
the book. Hold on a second. I got to remind
my computer that there's another computer. Here we go.

Speaker 5 (01:49:39):
Here's the Bugatti. Now that is a fine looking for you.

Speaker 4 (01:49:44):
Lovour noir eightighteen million dollars.

Speaker 5 (01:49:50):
If you're an ugly old fat dude, get that.

Speaker 4 (01:49:54):
That made you more That made you more attractive.

Speaker 5 (01:49:58):
This wow.

Speaker 4 (01:50:01):
So in I'm currently building a small model of a
nineteen seven Thank you Leper consented a long time ago,
and it's a nineteen seventy and a half Formula four
hundred Firebird that I'm in the process of putting together.

(01:50:21):
And I was looking at some of the color options
because I wanted to paint relatively true to fashion, and
I came across some pictures of an old seventy and
a half Firebird formula and I noticed this little label
and they used to put this on the ignition switch.

(01:50:44):
And it's the guide to the new GM ignition switch,
And like, how the hell hard can it? The new
lock system has been provided to decrease the theft hazard
of your new car. It looks it locks the electrical system,
the transmission and steering mechanism as well. The key can
be removed only when the transmission selector is in park

(01:51:05):
and the key is in the lock position. This means
that not only the electrical system is locked, but the
transmission and steering mechanism are locked also. The point being
we all I mean you know that instinctively. Now you
get in, you know you can only pull out the
key when it's the way yeah, all the way it's
off and all that. But back then in nineteen seventy,

(01:51:27):
it was like, hey, this is brand new. You can
only pull out the key when it's locked. The key
can be removed only in a manual train. And I
had no idea about this. If you got the manual,
the five speed, it can only be removed when the
shift lever it was in reverse and the key is
in the lock position. I didn't know that.

Speaker 5 (01:51:48):
And you can drove in one time in my life
where it had to be in reverse. It was a
manual really had to be in reverse to get the
key out. Yeah, only once, and I think that was
in the mid ninety It was like an old Parks
Department truck, but it had it was yeah, yeah, it
was a gear was a Have you ever driven a

(01:52:09):
column shifter? You know what I'm talking about?

Speaker 4 (01:52:14):
Three on the tree.

Speaker 5 (01:52:15):
Yeah, that's tough.

Speaker 4 (01:52:17):
I don't know if I've ever I can't remember if
i've that.

Speaker 5 (01:52:21):
Was the very The very first car I learned to
drive was a was a four speed Volkswagon. The second
car I drove, literally when I was fifteen years old,
was an on the column shifted old truck. And I
like to never learned that shit, but.

Speaker 4 (01:52:38):
I mean, try to call it by its technical name.
Three on the tree, three on the tree.

Speaker 5 (01:52:43):
Whatever, dude, that's what they're called. But I am glad
that when I was very very young, my dad taught
me to drive a stick shift automobile, a standard automobile,
because there are people right now who were scared to
death to get in a vehicle where they manually have
to shift gears and pop a clutch and all that
other ship. What what's it say right there? It does

(01:53:05):
say three on the tree, three on the tree.

Speaker 4 (01:53:09):
To drive the three on the tree.

Speaker 13 (01:53:11):
Seventy seven ten here, And like I've mentioned in other videos,
it is a three speed column shifted transmission.

Speaker 1 (01:53:19):
And so I just wanted to.

Speaker 4 (01:53:20):
Make a pay attention kids, this is what is called
well today a unicorn about how.

Speaker 13 (01:53:28):
To shift one of these old transmissions. You don't see
these hardly at all anymore.

Speaker 4 (01:53:33):
Because what a pain in the ass.

Speaker 5 (01:53:35):
Ye, how it works.

Speaker 13 (01:53:38):
Yeah, the first thing I'm going to show you is
reverse pull it towards you and pop it just like that.

Speaker 4 (01:53:50):
So then first I'm assuming is that'swar to and down.

Speaker 13 (01:53:53):
First gear, put it back in the neutral. That's neutral
right there, pull it, aren't you?

Speaker 4 (01:54:01):
Okay? That makes sense. First gear set away from you.

Speaker 13 (01:54:04):
Pop it back up into neutral. Second gear just let
it fall forward and push it straight up. All right,
that's second gear gear, third gear forward, push it down.

Speaker 4 (01:54:18):
Wow, that would be a giant pain in the ass, dude.

Speaker 5 (01:54:21):
I used to remember I hated that truck just because
I would kill it every time I started it. But
that's just because I couldn't figure out the clutch. But
I mean, once you learn to drive these vehicles, then
you can get into almost any vehicle and drive it right,
except maybe an eighteen wheeler, you know, because those things
have about twenty five gear.

Speaker 4 (01:54:41):
Cinema or some I would probably be an easier, easier
to drive one of those, and it would be the
three on the tree.

Speaker 5 (01:54:51):
Because this is that the model you're working on.

Speaker 4 (01:54:55):
This is kind of yeah, it looks a little bit
like it just simple. The you look at the interior
It's like you had the vault meter. You got just
what's that thing in the middle there?

Speaker 5 (01:55:09):
Oh, it's a cigarette lighter.

Speaker 4 (01:55:11):
Cigarette lighter.

Speaker 5 (01:55:14):
Yes, kids, you used to be able to smoke your cigarette.
It used to have ashtrays and cigarette lighters and vehicles.

Speaker 4 (01:55:20):
Some people still have ashtrays. Right.

Speaker 11 (01:55:22):
Uh.

Speaker 5 (01:55:23):
You know, I haven't driven a vehicle in years that
had an ash tray in it.

Speaker 1 (01:55:27):
Look at that.

Speaker 4 (01:55:27):
It's only got the AM radio in it with.

Speaker 5 (01:55:30):
Those mechanical push buttons. God, I hated those two.

Speaker 4 (01:55:34):
Look at that. That's I love the that's nineteen seventy
and a half beautiful car.

Speaker 5 (01:55:42):
People loved these vehicles. They love them. You go to
car shows and you look at these things where they
refinished them.

Speaker 4 (01:55:50):
Man, God, look at that. Look at that engine.

Speaker 5 (01:55:55):
That is just a and this is the kind of
vehicle of art we're on the weekends. Your head was
under the hood, period, didn't matter if there was something
wrong with the car or not. Your head was under
that hood dicking with it some way somehow.

Speaker 4 (01:56:08):
What is that color engine block right there? I don't know,
Pontiac blue. Okay, there's a fan clutch on the fan.
There's the worst thing about the worst thing about these
the Firebirds the early days, like that is the air

(01:56:31):
conditioner right here blocked the number eight spark plug. And
in some cases, I want to say, you had to
actually move the engine to get to the number eight.
I mean it was you. There was like an inch
of room between the air conditioning housing right there and

(01:56:52):
the number eight spark plug. You couldn't even get a
wrench in there. It was crazy how tight that was
or an otherwise you know, roomy engine compartment. That was
just it was nut, mister good. And this, by the way,
the seventy and a half did not come with bluetooth.

Speaker 5 (01:57:14):
No, it didn't.

Speaker 4 (01:57:14):
I know, it's crazy, I know.

Speaker 5 (01:57:16):
No, if you had mentioned bluetooth in seventy and a half,
people would have went, what why, what's a what's a bluetooth? Bluetooth?

Speaker 4 (01:57:25):
Wait a minutes, let's go. It's crazy. How times they
done changed in that car?

Speaker 11 (01:57:32):
What was it?

Speaker 4 (01:57:33):
Brand new? Fifteen hundred bucks? Oh yeah, see how much
you know how much those are now seventy thousand dollars?
Seventy thousand dollars. It's been fun, been a fun walk
down memory lane here on the Daily Mojo two hours
of audio deliciousness for today Monday, July the twenty first,

(01:57:53):
the Year of Our Lord twenty twenty five by a
damn thing. During the course the program Let's find Out,
John Klatschenor says vehicles with manual transmission could be considered
as having an anti theft device installed. That is a
good point.

Speaker 5 (01:58:04):
It's a good point.

Speaker 4 (01:58:05):
Who's gonna steal it? D They can't even They might
be able to start it, but they can't drive it.
Wade Robertson, But when really nice sports cars came by
and I was working with him, he would let me
take them, better tips and more fun cars to drive
from me. Thanks.

Speaker 6 (01:58:24):
Oh.

Speaker 4 (01:58:24):
I worked as a valet at the Adolphus Hotel and
one of the other valets couldn't drive a stick. Aha.
See there were advantages to being able to do things
like that. Let's over in the on the X, which
I have been sadly and Ron has been ignoring you
all over on the X today too.

Speaker 3 (01:58:42):
Shame on you, Ron.

Speaker 4 (01:58:43):
Why do you hate the people on X? Why do
you hate them? Huh huh dms as my eighty four
Corvette came with a shaped with an a shaped ratchet
to get out the back spark plugs. Yeah, I'm not
have to look at it because I swear I think
you had to move the engine, which is crazy. Uh
what it says. That's a really beautiful car. I'd love

(01:59:05):
to have one. At the time, the horsepower was impressive.
Now that thing is a turd, needs to needs about
double that under the and the fact that V eights
are going away, that we're dealing only now with V
six's that's kind of crazy too. Whiskey says three on
the tree isn't hard to drive, but I'm not a fan.

(01:59:28):
Show off over in the Daily Mojo chat room, as
a Pattrick g Great guest, I have to take the
wife's Highlander to the dealer because it needs an update.
Very inconvenient, as are most things with new cars, because
they are giant computers with a car built around them them. Yep,
just like Ron, He's a giant computer with a man
built around it. Sort of. Remember we the people most

(01:59:51):
haying together, otherwise we shall surely hang separately. Six separate Tyrannus,
resist stupid because it's going to end the world. And
good night, Doc.

Speaker 1 (01:59:59):
Tooms your arch Listen at the Dailymojo dot com.

Speaker 6 (02:00:05):
M M M.

Speaker 1 (02:00:07):
Hmm.
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