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July 28, 2025 120 mins
July 28, 2025

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The content explores sound issues in the medical community, historical discussions about pyramids and the Eiffel Tower, and the innovative applications of aerogel. It contrasts childhood experiences from the 1970s with modern parenting, includes humorous exchanges about aliens, and reflects on pop culture. Political accusations involving Trump and Obama are discussed, emphasizing the need for transparency. The narrative also covers legal challenges, personal reflections, and the future of space exploration under NASA and private companies.


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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. Unjustice your mojo.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
You are about to participate in a great adventure now
the age what sixty. He's just going to break back
radio with an attitude. This system that we love is broken.
I know that, dude, not comply. Welcome to another two

(00:28):
hours of common sense. That liberty of justice for all
is a minute 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.

Speaker 3 (00:41):
You know, yesterday and today are like days full of
stuff that we did in the past, Like this day
in history.

Speaker 2 (00:51):
You donna have little factoids about what happened on this
day back in seventeen eighty six and whatever.

Speaker 3 (00:56):
Okay, yesterday and today are like crammed full of stuff
that we did. It was this day in nineteen eighty
two that San Francisco became the first major US city to.

Speaker 2 (01:08):
Enact gun control. I mean, that's a big e right.
They banned the sale in possession of handguns in nineteen
eighty two. Animal House was released on this day. In
nineteen seventy eight, Toga Toga, toga, right, remember that I do.
The first photos of the Moon by a US spacecraft

(01:31):
were released on this day in nineteen sixty four. Wow,
when I was, I know, it's crazy. It was on
this day in nineteen forty five that are plane crashed
into the Empire State Building in New York City. Coffee
rationing ended on this day in nineteen forty three. They

(01:53):
rationed coffee during the war so that our soldiers could
have coffee. World War One began on this day in
nineteen fourteen. You remember when mel Gibson was pulled over
for drunk driving and went on that tirade. It was
like at Semitic tyrade, Yes, which is kind of weird.

(02:14):
I mean, that was on this day in two thousand
and six, almost twenty years ago. He then he threatened
the arresting officer and spewed out a string of anti
Semitic statements, stating that the Jews are responsible for all
the wars in the world. The following month, Gibson pleaded
no contest to a misdemeanor drunken driving charge and was
sentenced to three years probation. The Trans Alaska Pipeline became

(02:39):
fully operational when the first oil from Prudobay arrived in Valdez, Alaska.
The pipeline cost eight billion dollars to construct. The Fourteenth
Amendment was ratified on this day in eighteen sixty eight.
Remember what the Fourteenth Amendment did? No at legalized beer

(03:00):
in the colonies. Remember No, you know, you don't remember
that it was actually a defined US citizenship and granted
it to those born or naturalized in the United States. Ironically,
been a pretty big deal lately. Right also stated that
the rights of a citizen could not be removed without
due process. And it was on this day in eighteen

(03:21):
sixty six that Andrew Johnson, our president, signed the Metric
Act of eighteen sixty six.

Speaker 4 (03:31):
But we didn't follow.

Speaker 2 (03:32):
And and we sure as hell did not take that
as a clue. We didn't catch that clue. Phone.

Speaker 3 (03:39):
And yesterday, yesterday was the day that Never Going to
Give You Up was released in nineteen eighty seven, thirty
eight rolling, thirty eight freaking years ago.

Speaker 2 (04:00):
Wow, I know, it's insane. It was also yesterday, in
nineteen eighty one that Adam Walsh was murdered the Korean
The Korean War ended on the twenty seventh of July
and nineteen fifty three, which cartoon character debuted on July

(04:21):
twenty seventh and nineteen forty Mickey Mouse wrong, that would
be bugs bunny bugs bunny, and Vincent van Goh committed suicide.
On July twenty seventh, eighteen ninety Chewing gum invented received

(04:44):
a patent. Actually, chewing gum didn't receive the patent. Amos
Tyler of Toledo, Ohio got the first patent for chewing gum.
It was made with white rosin and olive oil.

Speaker 4 (04:58):
Nasty.

Speaker 2 (05:00):
And then, of course, on July twenty seventh and thirteen
seventy seven, something that affected us here in the past
five years, the first quarantine legislation. Yeah, baby, bring on
the quarantines. Right, that's Monday here in the Big City.

(05:21):
It's going to be an exciting day. You can probably
already tell it's a big day here at the Daily Mojo.
We have a conversation with Douglas Mackie coming up. I
hope I haven't given it the fecal touch, but we
spoke to him. It has been It's crazy because we
were just looking this up. It has been five months
since we spoke with Douglas Mackie. You can listen to

(05:43):
the conversation we had with him over on the Rumble
on our Rumble channel.

Speaker 4 (05:49):
And for those goings, for those right now going who
the hell is Douglas Mackie.

Speaker 2 (05:56):
They should be they should look at the screen right there,
Ricky Vaughan, Ricky Vaughn. Yep, and uh it's we're going
to have a conversation with him coming up in the
later on in the first hour of the program. Is
it that? Is it that time already?

Speaker 1 (06:16):
Is it?

Speaker 2 (06:21):
Actually? It is?

Speaker 5 (06:22):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (06:23):
Intern Kevin wanted to.

Speaker 4 (06:27):
I lot Kevin a lot. He's a good dude, do
you Yeah, he's a good dude.

Speaker 2 (06:32):
I mean he's also the same one that tells you that, hey, Ron, yeah,
you're still doing it wrong.

Speaker 4 (06:38):
He's a good dude.

Speaker 2 (06:39):
He's a decent guy. But he did want to start something.
I don't know if he's going to do this on
a regular basis, but he wanted to kind of figure
out what the the biggest news story of the day
would be. So here, uh you ready over there? All right?
Give him this?

Speaker 6 (06:56):
Hugh Hugh Kevin the Intern Without knowing the exact events
that will unfold today, but based on recent trends and
ongoing global developments, here's a reason take on what could
dominate headline biggest stories to your news stories today might
revolve around ongoing geopolitical tensions such as the Russia Ukraine
conflict or Middle East developments. Given their consistent prominence in

(07:18):
recent reports. For instance, updates on Russian military actions in
Ukraine like the reported capture of Luhansk Oblast or Ukrainian
drone attacks could escalate and grab attention.

Speaker 2 (07:31):
They could.

Speaker 6 (07:31):
Similarly, the Israel Gaza situation with recent air strikes and
malnutrition warnings from the who might see new developments that
draw global focus. These conflicts have been driving significant coverage
due to their humanitarian and political implication.

Speaker 2 (07:46):
Ever, did do we have Do we have a camera on?
We don't have a camera. Don't have a camera on Kevin?
Why don't we have a camera on Kevin?

Speaker 4 (07:54):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (07:58):
I don't either Kevin.

Speaker 4 (08:01):
Does Kevin look like that? I can put Kevin up?

Speaker 2 (08:06):
Not really? But uh huh, all right, well there's there's
got with a shot at h Yeah, we did need
a camera of him as he's looking at me through
the window over there, the same window that the freaks
go ahead and clap you people, same window that they
look through on a daily basis. Uh. Anyway, I guess

(08:30):
that's his look at the headlines. Always a pleasure to
have Intern Kevin on board the program.

Speaker 5 (08:41):
Here.

Speaker 2 (08:41):
Hey, I'm Kevin.

Speaker 7 (08:42):
I'm the new intern.

Speaker 2 (08:43):
We know who you are. We know if you want
to be a part of the program today, to use
the hashtag what I learned today. You can tag us
in your post on the social media platforms at Real
Brad stags at Real Ron Phillips. A couple of announcements
to make as we get through the program. One of
the bigger stories I think that may it's hard to tell.

(09:10):
It's hard to with Trump there. It was Devin Nunez
who was talking about to mar A Lago. He was
on Real America's Voice, Yeah, and he was talking about
what it was that the FBI had hoped to find

(09:30):
when they when they rated mar A Lago. Because we
never really got to the bottom of that, did we.
We never found out what it was what they were
looking for. I mean, it's never been officially and we.

Speaker 4 (09:41):
Saw a photograph of all of their top secret stuff
spread around on the ground. But that's it.

Speaker 2 (09:47):
And no one's gone to jail for that, No, you know,
that's that's the amazing thing to me. And and I
know Dan Bongino and Cash pateel Or are busy, they
got stuffed, and probably this is you know, this is
one of the big things that they'll come out and say, Hey,
this is what we've been working on behind the scenes,

(10:09):
and we told you just to be patient that things
would happen. But it would be nice to know what
in the hell the files say about what the FBI
was looking for in mar A Lago and not just
Malania's underpants. Yeah. Yeah, although I would have been tempted
to look in that drawer myself. I mean, if we're
going to be honest.

Speaker 4 (10:28):
I'm thinking somebody would have gone to jail for it
if he hadn't been elected president, Because if the other
person had been elected president, there's a hot chance he
could have gone to jail.

Speaker 2 (10:44):
Oh Trump, you mean yeah, oh eh. Maybe under the end,
maybe he still will go to jailer, maybe he's still
well for what exactly.

Speaker 4 (10:57):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (10:58):
That's that's the problem. But here's Devin noon Is talking
about what he thinks that probably they were looking for
at mar A Lago, the raid on mar A Lago.

Speaker 8 (11:06):
Yeah, so this continues, same people doing the same nonsense,
continue this hoax and raid mar A Lago, which I
believe we need to see what were they actually looking.

Speaker 2 (11:18):
For they went Tomorrow Lago.

Speaker 8 (11:20):
Yeah, I think that's an important key, and that the
statue limitations has not run out on.

Speaker 2 (11:26):
And maybe because maybe it was Russia Colludei's evidence. My
guess is that it was all right. What he means
is the Crossfire Hurricane was the official operation back in
what twenty sixteen to try to frame Donald Trump for

(11:47):
Russian collusion. Remember the Ppe tape, the hookers and all that.
I mean, it's just all this nonsense. But if is
she pregnant?

Speaker 4 (12:01):
I think I think our leg is up.

Speaker 7 (12:04):
Or no.

Speaker 2 (12:05):
Maybe No. It's a weird looking shot, isn't it It is? Yeah,
never ask one if they're pregnant, By the way, never
that can in some cases end very very badly. But
it Crossfire Hurricane was the whole behind the scenes thing
they're trying to, you know, get Donald Trump for or
frame him for Russian collusion, of which there wasn't any

(12:27):
otherwise he'd be in jail, right Yeah. Yeah, in theory
what they thought he had and what this guy was
trying to say, it just didn't explain it very well,
was that Trump has and likely took the paperwork out
of d C that detailed their plans to try to

(12:51):
set up Trump, so that he he had the evidence
of their dastardly plan and you know, kept it in
an envelope somewhere. Smart guy, though he's not going to
keep it at his house in mar A Lago. That's
that's buried under a palm tree somewhere on an island
in the middle of the Pacific where no one you know,

(13:13):
that's where you're kind of at the end of the
rock wall. Yeah, exactly, Yeah, I mean, that's I doubt. Yeah,
he's probably the only guy. And maybe maybe Malaney knows
where it is, just in case something happens to him.
But if they actually do, if he does have that pit,
and and that may be his his nuclear option, because

(13:38):
if they because of all of the the dust up
right now, the the murmuring and the accusations being slung
around about Trump being on Epstein's list, which first there
wasn't a list, then there was a list, then there
wasn't a list. Now there is a list, and he's
on it. You know, whole thing is it's it's like

(14:02):
a it's like a soap opera. But if he actually
does have the information, the paperwork that that proves that
they were trying to set him up through a fake
dossier and all of that, and that it was Hillary
Clinton's campaign and Obama President Obama at the time who

(14:22):
set this whole thing up, that could be treason. Now,
is Obama going to go to prison?

Speaker 4 (14:32):
No, nothing will happen to him. He's got immunity.

Speaker 2 (14:35):
He's got But I don't I don't think the immunity
covers things like treason.

Speaker 4 (14:43):
Maybe not.

Speaker 2 (14:43):
Pretty sure.

Speaker 4 (14:46):
Trump indicated that he had immunity, but that nothing likely
will ever happen to him.

Speaker 2 (14:51):
Now who had the obmunity that Trump that Obama had immunity? Yeah,
but that's in the regular uh uh, the procedure of
carrying out your job as a president on a daily basis.
It does not it doesn't It doesn't count if you're
out there making ship up about the duly elected new

(15:12):
president of the United States, which I think most of
us know, that's probably what did happen, although it's not
what you know, it's what you can prove. And if
he does have if if Trump does have that information,
are they going to be hesitant to release anything that
they've got on him in the Epstein files because they

(15:34):
know that he'll just turn around and here you go,
here's the information on a crossfire hurricane. Is this a
giant chess game?

Speaker 4 (15:44):
That's a good question. I would have thought that would
have anything about Trump back in the Biden days.

Speaker 2 (15:49):
I feel the same way. And here is where we
hadn't heard from Lindsey Graham, Hey y'all, Hey y'all quite
a while, and he got in a little dust up
with Kristin Welker. It was like a cat fight there
on the set of Meat the Depressed, and he's suggesting

(16:11):
that all of this is a is a smoke screen
for something. I mean, there's so many there's so many
people throwing accusations around about this is cover up for that.
I can't keep track of who's trying to cover up
what for what, and who's trying to distract from something
else to try to keep your attention off of what's

(16:33):
behind door number two. Maybe you can make sense of
Lindsey Graham and Kristin Welker.

Speaker 9 (16:38):
As you know, former President Obama has waged through a spokesperson.
He says that's just patently false. I actually spoke to
Susan Miller, who's a former senior CIA officer who helped
oversee the twenty seventeen intelligence assessment on Russian interference. She said,
it's completely false that Obama or anyone else asked them
to change or sway their investigations.

Speaker 2 (16:58):
She's, oh, well, then, of course, I mean, why, Kristen,
why didn't you say so? If they said that he
wasn't there doing that, then duhes she? Does she really
have a like a press credential? I mean, does she
know how the press works, because it seems to me

(17:18):
that you don't say stupid stuff like that. Well, we
talked to the super duper CIA person who said that
that's crazy, that's just nuts.

Speaker 4 (17:30):
And I know it's true because he said it out
of his own.

Speaker 2 (17:32):
Mouth, right right. He said, of course he did.

Speaker 9 (17:35):
They all, she says, and she's a Republican, says, they
all would have quit if that had happened. Senator, are
you trying to rewrite history to distract from the Epstein matter?

Speaker 10 (17:45):
Senator, I'm trying to let you know and the media
know that we found something we didn't know before.

Speaker 2 (17:54):
Yeah, they found something they didn't know before. Y'all, what
is it?

Speaker 10 (18:02):
At the end of day, I'm not calling for a
prosecution against President Obama for treason, but I am calling
for an investigation. Mister Miller also said there was no
credible evidence that President Trump colluded with the Russians.

Speaker 2 (18:17):
Huh, I mean it really? Is it just me? Or
is this stuff just starting to get murky as hell?
And it's I'm not even sure who's on second base anymore.
It's like the it's like the Abbott and Costellar routine.
Who's on first? There's so many accusations and counter accusations

(18:41):
and evidence that's supposedly there but not really there, but
people saying it didn't happen, but it kind of did.
And Obama comes out and actually makes a statement that
he said it's crazy. He would never do you know,
he likes Donald Trump deep down inside. He would never
want to see something bad happen to Don Old Don Yeah,

(19:03):
Old Don. I mean it just it seems all of
this stuff is getting just a little too wacky.

Speaker 4 (19:10):
Dude. I'm going to tell you right now, I might
be on the fence about this. I might be on
the fence about this except for one thing. What please
tell me you read Dan Bongino's post over the weekend,
the hawn in.

Speaker 2 (19:24):
Which l the one in which he said, during my
tenure here as the Deputy Director of the FBI, I've
repeatedly relayed to you that things are happening that might
not be immediately visible, but they are happening. The Director
and I are committed to stamping out public corruption and

(19:47):
the political weaponization of both law enforcement and intelligence operations.
It's a priority for us. But what I have learned
in the course of our properly predicated and necessary investigations
into these four mentioned matters, good lord who paid him
for all these big words, has shocked me down to
my core yep, which that's saying something because he's seen

(20:13):
a few things. We cannot run a republic like this.
I'll never be the same after learning what I've learned?
Is he being overly dramatic? What could it be that
has shocked him to his core and will cause him
to never be the same after learning? What?

Speaker 4 (20:33):
Do we have a right to know what that is?
As American citizens?

Speaker 2 (20:41):
I think so, and so does James O'Keefe, who quoted
the tweet and said we have a right to know
what it is that quote shocks Dan Bongino to his
core end quote. Many people probably can't handle that truth,
But at this point more harm would come from not
having it. I'm starting to think he has has seen

(21:03):
the aliens and knows about the spacecraft that we captured
from Roswell.

Speaker 4 (21:08):
You got to think about it, though, brat if Dan Bongino,
who you know, he probably saw quite a bit of
stuff as a secret service agent, there's no question.

Speaker 2 (21:17):
And as a competent as a copy.

Speaker 4 (21:19):
Right, But when you get to the inner workings, for
all intents and purposes, that would be like you accepting
the President's invite to become the deputy director of the FBI,
having talked about all of this for years on the radio,
and then getting in there and going, oh my gosh, yeah,

(21:43):
I mean that's it's it's all of your deepest, darkest
concerns have been.

Speaker 2 (21:51):
Exactly basically proven correct exactly. And that's the scary part.
And the fact that he's.

Speaker 4 (21:58):
Holding back a little bit. You can tell he's holding back.
He wants to say, he wants to talk about it.

Speaker 2 (22:04):
But Bongino does Samba have some of the drama in him.

Speaker 4 (22:08):
He does got.

Speaker 2 (22:10):
A again credit where credit is due. We're going to
conduct these righteous and proper investigations by the book and
in accordance with the law. We are going to get
the answers we all deserve. As with any investigation, I
cannot predict where it will land, but I can promise
you an honest and dignified effort at truth. Not my

(22:31):
truth or your truth, but the truth. God bless America
and all those who defend her respectfully. Dan interesting, I
did send him an outa boy.

Speaker 4 (22:46):
He earned that, you know.

Speaker 2 (22:48):
Probably you know, I'm sure he I'm sure he appreciated that,
James and Louisiana says. He says. For some reason, I
feel like I'm sitting beside the Mojo River again. When
I hear intern Kevin, I know it's it's he does
have his voice sounds familiar, but I can't place it.

(23:10):
And while I'm bat Mommy says, and I still haven't
found what I'm looking for. She quoting you two this
early in the morning. I asked my husband all the
time if he's pregnant. Ouch, uh, I get made up.

Speaker 4 (23:22):
I get made fun of for being about six months
along myself. You've you've been losing though, I have been
a little bit. Yeah, I lost him, gained and then
lost about forty pounds.

Speaker 2 (23:35):
Good. Yeah, that's excellent. Yeah, just kind of keep working.

Speaker 4 (23:39):
How it stagnated. I need to get out of the walk.

Speaker 2 (23:43):
You do exercises is a big deal. It will it
will help. Uh. Did Hillary fudge the reset button and
sell Russia a chunk of American uranium reserves? Or is
this a different timeline? See, that's the thing, is I do.
I feel like we're on the either the Calvin timeline
or the original timeline from Star Trek that things keep changing. Uh,

(24:07):
Like with the Epstein thing, It wasn't that long ago.
The Democrats are there's no there's no file, there's no list,
there's no and then all of a sudden we got
to release the list. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (24:18):
And then when then Jiz Layne comes out talking to
the DOJ and now wants a pardon. Wait a minute,
what's going on?

Speaker 2 (24:28):
She may deserve one, she may, she may prison.

Speaker 4 (24:32):
It's been a year or two.

Speaker 2 (24:34):
Right, Yeah, yeah, I guess it has Uh, and she
may I mean she may deserve a when all is
said and done, she may actually deserve a pardon. Uh.
Speaking of health. By the way, just a quick aside here.
I love the uh and I guess it's not a logo,

(24:54):
it's a it's I guess it's a slogan over at
stellasmojo dot com. Be prepared, scared. That's a good thing.
I had my I want to call it pedia like,
but it's not pedia like Covia, like COVID, like I
had my COVID like this morning. This morning helps with
your cardio, with your brain, with your energy, with your
immune support. Look at me, I'm healthy as a horse.

(25:20):
I added that in I didn't really COUGHID. But if
you'd like to try some of this. Here's the thing
about doctor Stella at stella'smojo dot com. Is she really
a lot like Tulsa Gabbard saw the light early after
after yeah, after they came down hard on her. They

(25:42):
did the same thing to Stella Emmanuel at the beginning
of the whole Rona crap show. They came down on
her and they were trying to insult her by saying
that she was the doctor who prescribed more ivermectin horse
paste than any other doctor in the cun tree. And
She's like, yeah, yes, because it works. Remember that, Remember

(26:07):
the big people on CNN, like Jake Tapper, I know
it's but consider the source. But they were saying, it's
horse paste. You can't, that's crazy, you're taking all that stuff.
And here we are five years later and it wasn't
even the horse paste people were taking.

Speaker 4 (26:25):
It was the pig because it was the swine.

Speaker 2 (26:28):
It was the pig. It was the pig paste. Damn straight,
it was.

Speaker 4 (26:33):
I have watched, dude, I have watched Don Newan and
Donna Fidusia take that bottle, pull it out with a syringe,
squirt it in a in a glass of water, and
just drink it. They do that all the time on
the air. They call it an abremectin Happy Hour. It's it,
but that's it's based on weight. It is the same
stuff and it's kept them healthy.

Speaker 2 (26:56):
And it works and it worked. So that's the thing
about stelle Mojo dot com. You can go there and
get your I believe you do. You do like a
little teledoc visit yep. But you can get your iromeactin.
You can get your hydroxy chloroquin there. Remember when everyone
was being dogged for taking hydroxychloroquin. I mean that really

(27:18):
going back, it was the nuttiest, wackiest time in modern history,
and and it's still it feels like it was yesterday
in a lot of ways, but at the same time,
it feels like it was one hundred years ago. It's
really strange, how doesn't it. I mean, it's been five

(27:39):
years one hundred years ago. Yeah, it's been five but
it feels like it was yesterday at the same time.
It's really strange. But go to stellar'smojo dot com, use
the promo code daily Mojo, and you'll say, how much
five percent?

Speaker 4 (27:52):
Five percent off?

Speaker 2 (27:53):
Five percent? That is better Bill, we we're so spoiled
as human beings now just five percent, yeah, because it's
better than the kick and the balls. Isn't it better
than that? Actually?

Speaker 11 (28:08):
Is it?

Speaker 5 (28:09):
Though?

Speaker 2 (28:09):
I bitch some people enjoy that. A little weird to me.
But hey, but you say five percent five percent when
you use the promo code daily Mojo at stellar'smojo dot com,
get your covilte It does helps it catch to the
brain fog, and so far it's working for me. I
like it and it has a nice taste to it too,

(28:30):
But I like it too, So you can go there
and get that now, and as well, as your uh
your prescription for ibermactin and hydroxychloric when get it all
at stellar'smojo dot com promo code Daily Mojo all rady.

Speaker 5 (28:53):
Monday. It's like a free trains, half.

Speaker 2 (28:57):
Open brains and pain.

Speaker 8 (29:00):
There they are.

Speaker 2 (29:02):
Red and ron again.

Speaker 5 (29:05):
Oh yeah, frasshop words and cut through fun, monster of silverism,
dialog fill somehow. They're the bar of the cot.

Speaker 9 (29:21):
Gets rides ransom.

Speaker 5 (29:31):
They're a runaway.

Speaker 2 (29:32):
Train your Daily Mojoe. We are the runaway train of
your Monday morning. Wait radio, what BT, mommy? Why is
it so hard to believe that list doesn't exist? Not

(29:52):
saying that that there never was a list, just the
fact how hard the FBI tried to take down from
Trump the list has been destroyed. I don't know if
there ever was a list, honestly. I mean, it's it's
it's and what's the list? Say on it? Good question,

(30:14):
Donald Trump. They put that picture out of him with
the girls, uh oh, sitting on the airplane and they're younger.
We all knew that already, And so there's pictures of
him with young girls sitting around. So what I mean,
it's it's all circumstantial and it and things can be
faked so easily these days, Like this is this real?

(30:37):
Or is it not real? Not saying this happened in
Ron's yard, but I mean seems like it could have.
It was actually straight out of Compton.

Speaker 12 (30:46):
New A eleven. Plenty of paranormal questions after a mysterious
figure was spotted your arm in Compton. Take a look
at this. Look at the right corner of your screen.
Here ring video from Jessica or Tez's home camera caught
someone or something walking by her home. She said that
said this happened around one am on June fifth. Jessica

(31:08):
said her two other cameras didn't catch anything, and her
neighbors didn't notice anything either. Paranormal investigator Zach Baggin's also
laid in on the footage.

Speaker 2 (31:17):
Okay, what's Zach say?

Speaker 3 (31:19):
I was sitting in my syndrome, that's none Zad but
my son were staring at each other, like what do
we do?

Speaker 12 (31:24):
We didn't even know what to do, Like I'm not
going to call the police, I'm not going to go outside.

Speaker 2 (31:27):
I guess I'm gonna have to live with the doubt
because I'm not I'm not taking.

Speaker 7 (31:32):
There's anything to worry about.

Speaker 4 (31:33):
But I cannot conclude that this is a hoax after
seeing that footage.

Speaker 2 (31:39):
That's all right, he can't conclude that this is a
hoax after seeing that footage. And I'd like to weigh
in as well and say, nor can I as how
would you?

Speaker 4 (31:48):
That was a non answer?

Speaker 2 (31:49):
Brand, Yes it was. And remember the key to success
in life and especially in this business is to be
vague and say it with conviction.

Speaker 4 (31:59):
Correct.

Speaker 2 (32:00):
Thank you, ed Dale, Grandy wherever you are. Let me
see the alien behind you, because this alien behind me,
may I mean it looks like they could be related? Yeah,
I mean the same color? Right, Yeah, this one, this
one does look like he's got a slightly elongated head.

Speaker 4 (32:22):
A little bit.

Speaker 2 (32:24):
But uh, it's who knows that it is? Compton is Compton?
Uh it's not as good as the one. Remember the
the was it Dobby?

Speaker 4 (32:37):
Yeah, the one who went back?

Speaker 2 (32:40):
Yeah, turned out to be a kid in his underpants.
Or that's at least that's what they told us it was.

Speaker 3 (32:47):
Uh see over in the uh over next, there's lap.

Speaker 2 (32:52):
Brad is as healthy well, he said health. I guess
he means healthy. Brad is as healthy as a horse
with three hoofs in the glue factory. Yeah, the hell's
that mean? Son of a And if you and after
I said such nice things about Lep, did you see
the you know, pull the picture up. I said that

(33:16):
left had made one of my one of my dreams,
or at least one of my bucket list dreams come true.
He had sent me the Wow, it's a good looking car,
isn't it.

Speaker 4 (33:31):
Yeah, but it looks model size.

Speaker 2 (33:34):
It looks like what it didn't look model size. It
looks like it's a big car.

Speaker 4 (33:38):
That initially, yeah, initially it didn't until I looked at
the car behind it.

Speaker 2 (33:46):
Yeah, that wasn't the best shot, but it does. It
looks pretty amazing when you take a picture of a
model and and if you do it in the right
perspective and all that, it really looks awesome. And I
love the seventy and a half Firebird formula at four hundred,
even though it's got a different hood than that. But anyway,
it's a when was the last model you built?

Speaker 4 (34:05):
Oh, probably forty years ago?

Speaker 2 (34:08):
Dude telling you it is one of those things that
will It makes you focus if you do it right,
the detail you want to do it right with the yeah,
you do it right. Well, why would you want to
do it wrong? Uh see clock Tower Drunks is Uh.
Brad is a former reality TV star, does have some

(34:29):
credibility in the matter of ring camera recording. Yes, I do.
I remember to tell you about the time we were
shooting something in Knoxville and uh, people were down at
the end of the driveway where it's some shooting at
somebody's house, and they kept smuggle small smugle smull and
the producer eventually goes down to the hey or you know,
shooting or I don't know if they were being noisy
on what it was, but anyway, he uh, he comes

(34:51):
back and he said they were wondering if we were
shooting a porn because they said you look like their
favorite porn star.

Speaker 4 (35:00):
That we're talking about, you brown chicken, brown cow.

Speaker 2 (35:05):
Yeah, thank you, Wade Robertson, real Bradstags whatever, fat, real
Ron Phillips lost I found. You're welcome, Ron. I'll hold
it for you for a bit.

Speaker 4 (35:16):
Hold on to that.

Speaker 2 (35:17):
You know, when Wade Robertson said he's gained weight, he's
you know, he's like gained an extra seven ounces. It's like,
oh no, I've got to go, and I can only
eat half a cheeseburger now, And Beach Girl said, is
it real or is it memorys thank you who remembers
that old thing, right, the good old days. We may

(35:39):
not have to worry about any of ith the this
came out on Friday. We talked about Yellowstone a little
bit last week, but I think this is actually different
news than what we said. There a couple of stories

(36:00):
about the earthquakes in Yellowstone and at Mount Rainier, and
I meant to find out if those two are Yellowstone
and Vernier part of the same range, near part of
the same range, Yellowstone the same range. Blah blah blah

(36:22):
blah blah. No, Yellowstone Mountaineer are not part of the
same mountain range. All right, Well, so we don't have
to worry about that because Rainier is doing the same thing.
But researchers at the University of Western Ontario have uncovered
over eighty six thousand earthquakes moving in chaotic swarms through
fault lines beneath Yellowstone, The finding significantly higher than the

(36:43):
previously known number of earthquakes in the area. The study
appears in the journal Science Advances. With the new insights,
they're getting closer they said, to decoding Earth's volcanic heartbeat
and improving how we predict and manage volcanic and geothermal hazards.
Remember all the animals that were running away from Yellowstone.

Speaker 4 (37:00):
They're like, I don't worry about it.

Speaker 2 (37:01):
It's fine. It happens all the time. And then it
turns out, wait, there are more earthquakes than there have
been previously. Eighty let's see eighty six thousand, two hundred
and seventy six earthquakes between two thousand and eight and
twenty twenty two. And it's to a large extent, there's

(37:24):
no systematic understanding of how one earthquake triggers another in
a swarm. Right, we can only wait a second. We're smart,
are all these scientists. They are smart enough to figure
out that we are causing global warming, but we can't
figure out how one earthquake trigger triggers another one in
a swarm.

Speaker 4 (37:46):
Yeah, that's what it says.

Speaker 2 (37:47):
Seems like the scientific community gets willfully ignorant convenient times.
So I looked at another headline over here, each Yellowstone
guests carbon footprint is equal to the weight of a
grand piano. Okay, I don't even know what that means.

(38:10):
But it sounds really bad, doesn't it. But for now
we have a far more robust catalog of seismic activity
under the Yellowstone Caldera, and we can apply statistical methods
that help us quantify and find the new swarms that
we haven't seen before. We can study them, we can
see what we can learn from them. We're all gonna die.

(38:32):
And again it's happening in at Mountaineer as well. There
have been a number. Let's see, I think there's a
near earthquakes. Who was it that said somebody sent that?
Who was it that sent that to me? In the
app and the Daily Mojo app? If you haven't downloaded it,
please do so. Turn on your notifications. You can send

(38:53):
us texts inside the app. And I can't remember who
was it sent me this? But Mount Rainier is also
experiencing swarms that started on July eighth. It's considered one
of the largest ever recorded for the volcano. According to
the USGS, an earthquake swarm a swarm is a cluster
of seismic activity earthquakes that occur one right after the other.

(39:15):
So far, the largest earthquake in the swarm happened July
eleventh and was no larger than two point four. This
past Friday, those seismologists with the Pacific Northwest Seismic Network
had located one thousand and ten earthquakes. They expect to
locate more earthquakes from the data gathered during the swarm.

(39:36):
Mount Rainier is known to have about nine earthquakes per month,
so it is a significantly higher I know, right, but
there's nothing to see here. Don't sound like it.

Speaker 4 (39:47):
Sounds like the Pacific Northwest is like constantly rumbling.

Speaker 2 (39:54):
Yeah. And back in the day it used to be
the joke was, wait until California falls off the ocean
after the big can Andrea's fault finally cracks. Which about you?
But I don't want that to happen. I don't I
want California to fall into the ocean. Although it would

(40:14):
technically put us closer to the beach, it would, think
about it. Phil Bell's here goes Big Mike.

Speaker 11 (40:24):
This is Phil Bell on the Daily Mojo with your
morning updates. Spoiler alert. Today's morning update is about the
new Jurassic Park movie, so if you're still planning to
see it, you might want to tune away. However, last
weekend I did see the movie, and for the most part,
I liked it, except for one little part. You see,
the writers decided to add in this narrative about prescription

(40:46):
drug pricing. Now, in the movie, there's a group of
people who have to go all the way to the
equator to find dinosaurs, sample their blood, and use those
samples to create a new life saving heart drug. But
of course, one of the characters suggests that this drug
will be priced so high that only one percent of
the population would be able to afford it. Now, I

(41:07):
want you to think about it for a second. If
it was so difficult to make a new drug that
a group of people had to go all the way
to the equator, get samples from really scary dinosaurs, and
then successfully bring it back to be worked on and
worked with, don't you think the drug that would result
from it would be kind of expensive. So in reality,

(41:28):
they actually tell the truth, and the truth is that
while today's drug companies don't have to chase down scary dinosaurs,
the reality is there are a lot of researchers, scientists, janitors,
and otherwise who have to be paid in order to
go through the process of creating new drugs that actually work.
And all of that is before you go through the
FDA approval process. In short, there's not only a lot

(41:51):
of trial and error, but there are a lot of
people who have to be paid and have to be
paid well in order to do their jobs. It's not
just a group of fat cats seas CEO sitting there saying, Gee,
how much more do I want to charge everyday Americans.
But what's even more interesting is that a lot of
what goes into our drug pricing these days is bureaucracy,

(42:12):
most of which was created in response to previous questions
about how high healthcare prices really are. So what we
really need is more free market and less government control
and intervention in order to make sure that drug prices
stay reasonable, as opposed to shaking our fists at the
people who are creating life improving and life saving drugs.

Speaker 2 (42:34):
Now, I know this is a controversial topic.

Speaker 11 (42:36):
For a lot of people, and some of you may
disagree with me, So please leave your comments under the show,
let us know what you think and let us know
your ideas about drug and healthcare pricing. What I also
want you to do is download the Daily Mojo smartphone
app and enable notifications. That way will be up to
date on the latest craziness and good stuff coming out
of Washington, d C. And you'll know how to share

(42:57):
it with others. Stay sharp, stay strong, and stay free
right here on the Daily Mojo.

Speaker 1 (43:02):
Phil Bell's Morning Update is only on the Daily Mojo.

Speaker 13 (43:35):
The top of the hour, but on the radio for
a blast truth and power for.

Speaker 5 (43:43):
The Daily Mojo.

Speaker 1 (43:46):
Stupidity is not a competition, So you.

Speaker 7 (43:50):
Don't shoot deer with a bullet that size. If you do,
you could cook it.

Speaker 2 (43:54):
At the same time, unless you're a politician.

Speaker 5 (43:58):
Get the news from.

Speaker 2 (44:11):
Now. We are working on some new imaging projects around
the around the motel, one of which is going to
be the intro to uh, Phil Bell's Morning Update. I
wanted to share something with you that I did have
AI create. It's just a little sneak peek behind the scenes.
This is a big mic here. Go ahead and grab

(44:33):
this video. I'll play this and uh, this is the
the attempt at it's AI's attempt at making the thing
look like it's inflating, right, it's a it's just and

(44:54):
and that was the best that the a I could
come up with, which a little weird to me, but
you know whatever, this is the headline from October eighteenth,
twenty twenty three, from the Department of Justice. Social media
influencer Douglas Mackie sentenced after conviction for election interference in

(45:17):
twenty sixteen presidential race. The defendant attempted to trick voters
into believing they could vote by text message because people
are stupid. He was sentenced on that day to seven
months in prison for his role in that conspiracy to
interfere with potential voters rights. I mean I can laugh now.

(45:43):
Douglas Mackie joins us once again here on the program.
Thank you for taking the time to be back here.
How good do you feel that this has been You've
been vindicated, now it's been well. Tell us the latest update.
What's going on with your case? Yeah?

Speaker 7 (46:01):
Thanks for having me.

Speaker 14 (46:01):
So the latest update is, like you said, I was
vindicated about three weeks ago. The Second Circuit Court rule,
thank you, that there was insufficient evidence to support my conviction.
So what happened was they indicted me based off of
group chats that they didn't that I never even read.

(46:23):
They had no proof that I even read these group
chats and said this was where a conspiracy to trick
voters was hatched. I always maintained that this was just
a joke and I was never part of any conspiracy
to steal anyone's vote.

Speaker 7 (46:38):
And the second circuit courts agreed three to zero.

Speaker 2 (46:42):
That is such good news. When I saw that, I
was so excited. Immediately sent you that text. I was
so happy for you, because you know what, dude, you
had balls's biggest coconuts. First of all, for stepping up
and not looking for the pardon, which do you think
you could have gotten? Right? You think you could have
gotten a pardon for this?

Speaker 14 (47:05):
So we had a lot of support from President Trump.
He mentioned my case by name multiple times and even
included it in his weaponization order as an example of
Webinar's government. So we and Trump also, his son, Donald
Trump Junior, has been a great supporter of me. And
we'll actually have some I'll tease it, we'll have I

(47:26):
think we'll have some news breaking on his show Tonight's
everyone tune into Donald Trump Junior. So we felt pretty
confident about getting a pardon, but ultimately, like you said,
we wanted to try to win the case, get vindication
for myself personally, but also to send a message that
this kind of law shouldn't be abused and this weaponization

(47:47):
shouldn't be happening.

Speaker 2 (47:49):
And I really, I was so impressed when you said that,
And I mean it really it takes more people like
you stepping up and actually taking on the system because
you knew you were right. We knew you were right.
This was a stupid I hate to classify as stupid
because it really aft with your life. I mean, you

(48:12):
lost more than a few good nights sleep, I would
imagine over this thing, right.

Speaker 7 (48:17):
Oh yeah, absolutely.

Speaker 14 (48:18):
I mean now, looking back in hindsight, it seems like
a big joke or a big prank, but it was
very real at the time. And I lost honestleep, I
lost a lot of and I got a lot of
gray hairs.

Speaker 2 (48:28):
Uh huh. Did did you have any serious residual health effects?
I mean, because stuff like this can really actually mess
with your physical health anything long lasting.

Speaker 7 (48:42):
Yeah.

Speaker 14 (48:42):
I had a lot of, you know, health issues, just
I think from the stress. And I had a lot
going on otherwise in my life with getting married and
having a son, and you know, my son was hospitalized
for three and a half months in the nick You
so I had a lot going on, but this case
absolutely you know, I feel like I finally recovering. I
mean I looked pretty I looked pretty awful for a

(49:04):
little bit of time, becausee it's just very difficult, and
I definitely, you know, saw the doctor a few times.

Speaker 2 (49:10):
Oh sure. Well, yeah, when you when you're up against
an entity as big as the federal government who has endless,
endless funds, which really must piss you off because when
you realize, wait a minute, they're taking my tax money
and they're using it against me, you know, with their
their team of attorneys, and they can you know, they

(49:31):
can go for as long as they want to because
they have an endless supply of money until you can
actually you know, get in touch with somebody or make
a case that people with common sense can actually you know,
understand and and affect. So when this happened you, when
you when you were sentenced to seven months in prison,

(49:52):
immediately you you started the appeal process.

Speaker 15 (49:54):
Right exactly, Yeah, yeah, started up s okay, And how
difficult was that and how confident was your attorney at
that point that it could get overturned.

Speaker 14 (50:10):
So we had a very strong appeal. We thought we
were going to win eventually, but we didn't know whether
that would be Second Circuit Supreme Court. Now, the funny
thing is, we thought our strongest of pallid arguments were
number one, that the statue shouldn't apply to this kind
of meme. Basically, this statute is reserved for people who

(50:31):
were actually injuring, threatening people who were exercising their rights
as Americans, you know, whether that's KKK type stuff, and.

Speaker 7 (50:40):
So we actually felt like that was strong.

Speaker 14 (50:42):
We felt like the fact that they brought this case
in Brooklyn, New York, even though there was no connection
except for they said that the tweets went over the
wires surrounding the water around Brooklyn. So we felt like
there was no basis for venue and the insufficient of
the evidence, which we argued all along from day one.

(51:04):
That was actually our third argument. It was kind of
like an argument. Look, we thought all the arguments were
winning arguments, but we didn't actually expect that one to win.
So we thought we felt like we would win. We
didn't know it would be such a resounding victory. The
Second Circuit. They didn't just dismiss the case and send
it down for a new trial or something like that.

(51:24):
They actually directed the lower court to enter a verdict
of not guilty based on the fact that no rational
jury could have convicted me based on these facts. And
the problem was, like I said, they brought They went
to all these efforts, Like I said, millions of dollars,
millions of thousands of hours reading terra by a massive

(51:46):
trove that they turned over to us, a discovery of
group DM chats, not to mention thousands and thousands of
thousands of tweets that they cherry picked, and they knew
all along their case was insufficient. They didn't have evidence
that I was even in the group chats. They didn't
have evidence that I even intended that any wood would

(52:07):
not vote what they saw this meme, and they yet
they still brought the case. And in any other case
where they didn't have sufficient evidence, you would expect prosecutors
to do the right thing and to not bring a case.
But they didn't do that because this was political uptimization
and they wanted to send a message and they wanted
to go after Trump supporters.

Speaker 2 (52:27):
Unbelievable and yet completely believable. When the discovery that they
that they sent to you, was it like all electronic
or did you end up getting like big boxes, file
boxes of papers.

Speaker 14 (52:43):
It was all electronic and the way that Twitter does
of these dms, each message is a text file, and
you've got to pay somebody to go back and turn
these text files into something that you could actually read
line by line, you know, for things coming out. Each
tweet was a text file, and then it would have

(53:03):
an image file way over here, and I fold her
over here, and you'd have to connect the two, and
so it was really crazy. We didn't we didn't have
the money or the resources or the time to even
read all of these uh DM chat groups and all
this tweets and stuff.

Speaker 7 (53:21):
We didn't even have the resources.

Speaker 14 (53:22):
We did the best we could with like some volunteers
and some interns and running keyword searches, but we didn't
even have the resources to dig through all this stuff.

Speaker 2 (53:33):
Can can you tell me how much money this costs?

Speaker 1 (53:36):
You?

Speaker 2 (53:37):
Are you comfortable? Tell tell me to pound stand if
you want to. But I mean I had, Yeah, I'm comfortable,
Please do Yeah.

Speaker 14 (53:44):
So I paid everything I could, which was slow six
figures and then that wasn't even coming close. So we
raised We were fortunate. We raised a lot of money.
But the truth is I owe a lot of money
to the appellated attorneys because fortunately we were able to
pay for the trial. We're talking about over one point
five million in bills, maybe close to two million. I'm

(54:08):
still telling it up and that doesn't even count you know,
volunteers or people that agreed to work the case knowing
that they may never get paid, and so we're going
to see what we can about restitution going forward.

Speaker 2 (54:23):
Yeah, that's that. That breaks my heart to hear that,
because I mean, it's just that that alone will give
you stress to keep you up at night. Are you
doing I would imagine when you when you won the appeal,
it was a big relief. Do you feel physically better now?
Are the the Are you able to sleep at night?

(54:45):
Get good rest?

Speaker 14 (54:46):
It took a while, it took a few weeks, but
I feel much better physically, and it's a huge load
off me.

Speaker 7 (54:53):
At first.

Speaker 14 (54:54):
You know, I was still in that fight mode when
we got the news, because look, this case, the criminal
case is over, but we're going to have announcements, Like
I said, tune into Donald Trump Junior today moving forward,
We're going to keep fighting this case because we want accountability.

Speaker 2 (55:15):
God bless you, sir. I am again, I'm really impressed
with your If I say the word moxie, it's going
to make me sound like I'm long years old. But
this result resolve is good. But you know what, you've
got moxie too, kid, Yeah, you really do. I mean
it's I'm I'm really impressed with your your stick toitiveness

(55:37):
and uh and for stepping up and taking one for
the team, because we all knew that this was a
giant croc of shit from the word go and that
they were just going after you. So we are very
very happy that this is your at least out from
underneath the weight of this. You're going to be on
Don Junior's show tonight, You'll have news. Then where can

(55:59):
people go? I'm assuming you're still taking donations for the
legal fund. What's that website?

Speaker 7 (56:06):
Yes, Memdefensefund dot com.

Speaker 14 (56:09):
Those funds are going to basically be paying off legal debts.
Memdefensefund dot Com. You could see me on Twitter at
Doug Mackie Case and that's where you can find me.

Speaker 2 (56:21):
All right, excellent, Really appreciate it, Doug. I appreciate your time,
Appreciate your effort and all of the things you've done
to actually defend justice in this country. You are you'll
go down his history is one of the good guys.
I appreciate it and let us know if we can
help going forward.

Speaker 7 (56:39):
Thank you very much.

Speaker 14 (56:40):
Well, I couldn't have done it without support, like I said,
fundraising American people and I can't tell you how many
prayers and my beautiful wife, my family. So it's a
team effort, and I'm grateful for your support as well.

Speaker 2 (56:53):
Absolutely, and give the wife and the child big hug
from us. Thank you, sir. We'll talk.

Speaker 7 (56:57):
Thank you so much.

Speaker 2 (57:01):
That really does I know, not the loaves of dollars.

Speaker 4 (57:06):
You know, a lot of people wouldn't have fought it
as as much as Doug did. So I'm proud of
him for doing so, man.

Speaker 2 (57:12):
I really am. And that's I mean, we need more
people like that who are willing to step up and
and and fight back. And it's hard to do because
they've got endless frickin' pockets. They'll just poorhouse.

Speaker 4 (57:26):
You get scared about what the future has to hold,
You get scared about what the unknowns, You get scared
about the money. But you know, the dude, just go.

Speaker 2 (57:37):
It's not hyperbole to think they would send somebody out
to kill you. Yep. That's that's the crazy part is
that now we live in in America, and it's probably
always been this way, we just didn't see it. But
we live in an America now where if you get
on the wrong side of the the machine in d C,

(58:00):
they'll just they will They'll off you. Yeah, they will
kill you. That's crazy. Uh huh, because and there are
some people out there who think that that's crazy, that
you know, that's not true. Your government would never kill Yes,
they would, They sure as hell would.

Speaker 4 (58:17):
They will damn sure hunt you down.

Speaker 2 (58:19):
Uh huh. Semi Ambervert says it's been three weeks since
the case ended. His wife is uh is sure with
his next kid in eight months, Olhwa's due with his
next kid. It is sad that it took ten years
for seven months of nonsense. Yeah, God, that was twenty

(58:41):
so it would have been twenty fifteen that the meme.
So that's ten fricking years. It's if he's what.

Speaker 4 (58:49):
You how old he can run? Oh, he's probably what
mid thirties.

Speaker 2 (58:53):
I was gonna say, if he's forty. It's been going
on for twenty five A quarter of his life has
been dealing with this. That's that is that is some
tough stuff right there. And and and good for him.
You want to talk about Ramika? You got anything to hawk?

Speaker 10 (59:11):
Uh?

Speaker 4 (59:12):
Not anything specific?

Speaker 2 (59:16):
We all right?

Speaker 4 (59:16):
Well never no, yeah, yeah, let's talk it.

Speaker 2 (59:20):
Come on now, give it to me. Pitch me right.

Speaker 4 (59:23):
Here, Mojo laser pose, it's it's we've got anything and everything.
By the way, we are working and I'll I'll just
go ahead and say this, because it's July. We are
working on the ornaments for the Insider Club for the listeners. Uh,
and those ornaments will become available probably in about a month,

(59:45):
the Christmas ornaments, because you know these are collector's items, Brad.

Speaker 2 (59:50):
Damn straight they are. And I see you've also worked
on having you on the screen when you talk about
your company here. Well, but but it's my company.

Speaker 4 (59:57):
Well, it's I'm showing my company.

Speaker 2 (59:59):
That's me. I'm I'm sitting here listening.

Speaker 4 (01:00:01):
I don't have a screen with just me because I
know it's it's.

Speaker 2 (01:00:07):
We talked about this last time. Oh, surely he'll fix
that bike.

Speaker 4 (01:00:10):
I'm getting scolded now and I know that I should
be figuring this out.

Speaker 2 (01:00:14):
Hey, Ron, Yeah, you're still doing it wrong, Kevin. I
don't that wasn't necessary. I mean that, don't pile on
to Ron. You just Ron. I'm sorry for Kevin. I
don't know what he Oh I always deal with, but
I love you. Yeah yeah, oh, I'm sorry. What were

(01:00:36):
you selling over there to Ramik Designs, Mojo Laser Pros.

Speaker 4 (01:00:41):
We're selling good stuff? Can I show it on the
screen now?

Speaker 2 (01:00:44):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:00:45):
Yeah, yeah, thank you? Yeah, I mean we look, I
gotta do something. We still have the ornament from twenty
twenty four up, but yeah, it's over a year ago.
It's okay, well brush it because they're collector's items. People
are still buying those, so yes, people who weren't able
to get them before but want to hang all of

(01:01:05):
them on the tree. We've had what four years worth
of ornaments now.

Speaker 2 (01:01:09):
So yeah, yeah, oh I'm glad I'm not you because
Misty is gonna she.

Speaker 4 (01:01:13):
Is kicking my ass already.

Speaker 2 (01:01:15):
I can kick your ass. I can feel it. I
can feel it from here and you're down the hall.
I feel all the way down the hall. I'm afraid.

Speaker 4 (01:01:21):
I just work out in so much stuff every day.
I just don't hate specific item.

Speaker 2 (01:01:27):
It's okay, it's okay. I can I share something with you?
Because I thought about you when I was doing this.
I'd love for you to share something with it. And
this is just a this is a prototype. It doesn't
even work yet, but this is it's an idea that
I have. And see it's a little microphone, and that
is nice what I wanted. That looks great. It's uh
it's it's actually it doesn't look that good. I mean

(01:01:48):
it looks if you squint and stand by it back.
But anyway, I want to do this and I want
to have it. Uh you push a button and it
can be uh well, let's just say me, for instance,
saying like if you got one of these and it
would say, hey, Ron, you look great today. I love
that jacket, I love your shoes, You're you're good enough.

Speaker 4 (01:02:09):
You affirmation microphone. I like affirmation microphones.

Speaker 2 (01:02:13):
Yes, and not only that would it say that, but
it would be uh updateable. So in other words, you
get sick of hearing Brad saying, hey, you look great?
Is it you? You know? You? You know, sholl out
a couple more bucks and Brad send you another one
and you can load that onto your little affirmation microphone.

(01:02:34):
What do you think? It's a good idea?

Speaker 4 (01:02:36):
I love it.

Speaker 2 (01:02:36):
Yeah, absolutely, just I'm tossing this one around, just just
kind of tossing out there because you know, you always
have to toss out new things, new ideas, young minds,
fresh ideas. That's what we do.

Speaker 4 (01:02:47):
I love that. Send me that follow, dude, I'll help make.

Speaker 2 (01:02:50):
Some twenty bucks. It can be yours, okay. Mojo Laserpros
dot com is the website there, don't uh, don't forget
the The new ornament will be up there sometime between
now and twenty twenty seven.

Speaker 4 (01:03:03):
That's not true, it'll be it'll be uh'll be between
the tournament. Ready, it's basically been approved, so I can
put it up anytime, so.

Speaker 2 (01:03:11):
We'll be up there before. Yeah, okay, so we'll be
up there sometime between now and twenty twenty seven. You're correct, okay,
just saying umm, And there's no promo code or anything
like that.

Speaker 4 (01:03:23):
You, yeah, I use the promo code. You get a discount.
Promo is Mojo Favo ten percent.

Speaker 2 (01:03:29):
Promo code is Misty. Gon't kill him. She is Mojo
Laserpros dot com and give now to Ron's surgery fund.
Thank you for that, Paul, Mojo Laserpros dot com.

Speaker 5 (01:03:45):
The Daily Make him Morning with.

Speaker 1 (01:03:55):
The Good Daily mojo.

Speaker 2 (01:04:08):
I'm looking around for this story that we had earlier
today but we couldn't confirm whether or not it was true.
But the former CEO of Astronomer, which again Astronomer, the

(01:04:28):
company that we still don't really know what it is
that they do. I mean, they it's not about astronomy,
it's about data. But who the hell knows what they do.
But it's possible that Andy Byron, the former CEO of Astronomer,
is going to sue Coldplay for emotional I'm not mad.

(01:04:55):
I'm not making it up for emotional distress and something.
I'll find it and side.

Speaker 4 (01:05:01):
He's gonna sue them.

Speaker 2 (01:05:05):
The amazing part about that, there's so many amazing aspects
to the story and human nature. But I don't know
if we mentioned that. In fact, her husband, the look
on her face right there is just amazing. Her husband,
that dude right there, was out of town the night

(01:05:28):
of the Coldplate. He was, or he still is, the
CEO of Privateer Rum. His name's Andrew Cabot. He was
on an overseas work trip with his wife.

Speaker 4 (01:05:45):
Imagine being overseas and opening Fox News or something and
you go what.

Speaker 2 (01:05:55):
Ain't man stop it? Uh? They're part of me and
we talked about on Saturday Morning Live, part of me.
Jeffy was like, you know, I feel bad for I said,
why because I mean they knew what that what they were.

Speaker 4 (01:06:11):
Doing was wrong, right, I mean they they did, and
I feel bad for him.

Speaker 2 (01:06:15):
I mean, it's a stupid tax that you exacted on yourself. Rohn.
You are with somebody you shouldn't be with, or are
not supposed to be with, or nobody knows you're with them.
Don't go to a concert where they have a freaking
kiss cam. Well they didn't know. You mean the giant

(01:06:37):
round screen that was right there showing people come on,
I mean that was that is a giant stupid tax,
is what that is. But her husband was overseas and
like Ron said, can you imagine you wake up in
Paris having a quathon and your news and bam, hey,

(01:06:59):
very there's Kristen. Is that Andy Weather? What are they doing? Oops? Whoopsies?
Or or was there a preemptive text phone call or something?
Hey honey, right, we're going to see some stuff on
the news. Yeah, we'll talk when you get home. Okay, okay,

(01:07:23):
Uh I can't find the damn story he is, where
is it here? He is going to I'm just gonna
read I'm going to relook for Andy by Wren Uh
and here we go. UH. Cold Play controversy intensifying. Former

(01:07:43):
astronomer CEO is reportedly considering legal action against the band
for emotional distress and invasion of privacy.

Speaker 4 (01:07:52):
My ass I guarantee you the backs of the tickets
probably said, f y I you're gonna be on camera.

Speaker 2 (01:08:01):
There's the headline.

Speaker 7 (01:08:03):
Well that's.

Speaker 2 (01:08:06):
They've got one of the name of this website is
Times Now News, but the way it is, the way
it all runs together looks like Times Snow News, Like
what the hell snow have to do with anything Coldplay
converts continues to escalate. Former astronomer CEO reportedly considering legal action,
according to Insider sources cited by rob Shooters Shooter is

(01:08:28):
it shooter scoop or Shutter Scoop? I don't know, it
doesn't really matter. Byron plans to suit Coldplay and the
event organizers for emotional distress and invasion of privacy after
he was shown embracing or canoodling Astronomer's HR chief No,
she was their people person. She wasn't the hrch she
was the leader of people. Byron reportedly holding Coldplay front

(01:08:53):
man Chris Martin responsible well the controversy surrounding the viral
kiss cam incident. According to a legal expert quoted by
The New York Post, Byron may sue Coldplay over the fallout.
If we're getting creative. A possible claim would be for defamation,
specifically as it relates to Chris Martin characterizing the two

(01:09:15):
as having an affair. Attorney Cameron Doa La Tasha Haha
from MSD Lawyers exclusively told Page six the two, I mean,
Chris Martin did say they're either having an affair or
they're shy. It was the truth, right, I mean, I

(01:09:35):
guess they could come out and say we're not having
we're just friends. And because we don't know that they were.

Speaker 4 (01:09:40):
And she was cold and I was just trying to
keep her warm, and.

Speaker 2 (01:09:44):
We don't know that they were bumping uglies, we have
no idea. They may not have been. They may have
just been. I mean, sure his pause were all over
her boobleage. I mean, but who doesn't do that with
fellow co work? How often wrong have you stood in
front of me, and I put my hands on your
boot a lot, a few times a lot. Yeah, I mean,

(01:10:08):
it doesn't mean we're doing We're not bumping uglies, we're
not doing the deed.

Speaker 4 (01:10:12):
But it doesn't mean we're not. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (01:10:14):
It doesn't mean we're not. That's true. Delaski Bless explained
that Byron would need to demonstrate that there wasn't an
affair to prove defamation. How do you prove that there's
not an affair. Here's all the pictures of us not screwing.
According to the report, legal experts say the lawsuit would
be a long shot. At a public concert with cameras

(01:10:38):
and seventy thousand people, your expectation of privacy is near zero.
Sounds like he's trying to shift blames.

Speaker 4 (01:10:45):
I'm almost positive that almost every concert ticket you can
purchase has some wordage or verbiage on it that says,
if you're boffing your cotation of privacy, because we have everywhere,
and by entering this facility or coming to this concert,
you agree to these terms period.

Speaker 2 (01:11:07):
Your life may change forever. Oh I did not see this.
His wife, the wife Meghan of Andy Byron her name,
of course, would be Meghan Byron. In her post, however,

(01:11:28):
she says, hello, my name is Megan Kerrigan, no longer
Meghan Byron. There you go today. I officially dropped his
last name. And while it may seem like just a
formality to some, to me, it was closure. It didn't
make I didn't make this decision out of bitterness. I
made it out of peace. I gave my heart, my loyalty,
and my name to a man who couldn't even respect

(01:11:52):
me in private, let alone in public. The betrayal was painful,
but the public humiliation that cut deeper than anything. Who
watching the man I love to kiss another woman, not
behind closed doors, but at a concert in front of
thousands while the wear were quartered it like entertainment. Well,
he didn't kiss her, did he. I didn't see him

(01:12:14):
kissing her.

Speaker 4 (01:12:14):
I don't remember him kissing her.

Speaker 2 (01:12:18):
And not to say that he didn't, but not to
say that he did. There's a bit of them. So basically,
some of the responses to her post are interesting. So
basically this was a closure confirmation for her. She was
catching hell at home but still taking it like any wife,

(01:12:39):
fighting to keep her family together, but being verbally, mentally
and emotionally abused. Go get your life back along with peace.
You will find a good better half to enjoy his
monthly payments with you. Yeah, there's going to be some
money changing hands in that, in that situation, and.

Speaker 4 (01:13:00):
It's especially if it's an alimony state.

Speaker 2 (01:13:04):
Uh do those still exist? Do alimony states still? I
think they do. I don't know what states do not
enforce alimony. Alimony is enforced in all US states with
no exceptions. All fifty states have laws regarding alimony, but

(01:13:28):
the specific rules and requirements vary significantly from state to state.
While permanent alimony is less common now, many states still
offer temporary or rehabilitative alimony who support a spouse during
a transition period after divorce. Shoe not going to be pretty,
Not going to be pretty. And speaking of trouble, how

(01:13:55):
do you feel about George Santos?

Speaker 7 (01:13:58):
Uh?

Speaker 4 (01:13:59):
He was the one that got kicked out of Congress right.

Speaker 2 (01:14:02):
Right for not stolen valor but basically saying that lying
on his resume. Yes, yeah, which I didn't realize that
was a crime, but okay. And then of course the
Republicans threw him under the bus like nobody's business. I
mean they didn't even the Democrats at least got handed

(01:14:25):
to the Democrat. At least they would have circled the
wagons for a little while until they realized, oh shit,
he's on fire. He's going to tell you all drop
cut bait. At least they would have made it look
like they gave a crap for ten minutes. But Republicans
were like, get rid of him, dump him. He was
on Tucker's show and he had this to say about

(01:14:50):
and I want you to well, she'll come to mind
as soon as you hear this, but Nancy Pelosi is
the poster child for what he's about to say.

Speaker 16 (01:14:59):
The sheer volume of alcohol in Congress is staggering. Think
of all those late nights voting right some members. Tucker
would show up so wasted.

Speaker 2 (01:15:13):
Is he gay?

Speaker 4 (01:15:17):
Gay Dar says yes, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 16 (01:15:19):
They would have to sit in the cloakroom and hand
their voting cards to sober members to go do their job.
Actually yeah, and that's actually against House rules. I've seen
that in my in my cloakroom. I know it happens
in the Democratic room because I've exchanged notes with the
fellow freshmen.

Speaker 2 (01:15:37):
He's like, it happens here too. It's a shit show.

Speaker 16 (01:15:40):
So yeah, I've watched groups of some of my colleagues,
some guys who I genuinely like a lot, sit in
the corner of the cloakroom, completely inaborated, incapable of walking outside,
standing still, sticking their car and pressing yay or nay
and back, especially when we had long amendment backs with

(01:16:00):
like you know, seventy amendments. Yeah, they just hand their
cards and say, just vote whichever we're going to vote.
Just don't make me look crazy. I've seen it. The
sheer volume.

Speaker 2 (01:16:10):
Of is that not wow? Well wow, I'm not surprised,
I'm not amay, I'm just more than anything, I'm It
exhausts me because again, everything in DC is broken. Every
I mean, there's not a corner of that place.

Speaker 4 (01:16:30):
They try to pretend like it's not that's not now.
I mean, if we knew, if everybody just knew it
was broken, we could fix it. But to pretend that
it's not broken, nobody's ever going to try to fix
it because they're too embarrassed by the fact that it's broken.

Speaker 2 (01:16:46):
Oh I don't think. I don't think they're embarrassed. I
think they don't give a shit, and they're going to
ride that bad boy for as long as they can
until it drops. But they're doing it on our dime,
and it should just it should piss everybody off. He
turned thirty seven last Tuesday, George Santos did, and on

(01:17:09):
Friday he reported to federal prison to begin serving an
eighty seven month sentence after pleading guilty last year to
wire fraud and aggravated identity theft. He related him part
to his campaign finances.

Speaker 4 (01:17:26):
How many years is that? Seven months? Just over?

Speaker 2 (01:17:29):
Six? Sure? Six seventy two years? Eight eight years eight
times twelve is ninety six? Right?

Speaker 4 (01:17:40):
Seven point two five years.

Speaker 2 (01:17:48):
I mean it's he'll he'll get out early likely. But
there's something about him that's likable. I don't know what
it is.

Speaker 4 (01:18:00):
His gayness.

Speaker 2 (01:18:03):
Maybe maybe that's what it is. I don't know. There's
just something about him that's like, do you not think so?

Speaker 4 (01:18:11):
I don't really know.

Speaker 2 (01:18:12):
He's charming. Maybe that's I don't know him either. He
tweeted this on Thursday. He said, well, darlings.

Speaker 4 (01:18:21):
He's gay.

Speaker 2 (01:18:22):
Yes. Uh, the curtain falls, the spotlight dims and the
rhinestones are packed. Oh yeah. They are from from the
Hog from the halls of Congress to the chaos of
cable news. What a ride it's been, was it MESSI
always glamorous occasionally, honest, I tried most days. To my supporters,

(01:18:43):
you made this wild political cabaret worth it. My critics,
thanks for the free press. I may be leaving the
stage for now, but trust me, legends never truly exit
forever fabulously yours.

Speaker 4 (01:18:57):
George didn't what didn't he dress as a woman? Didn't
he cross dress?

Speaker 7 (01:19:05):
Or?

Speaker 4 (01:19:05):
Am I thinking of somebody else?

Speaker 2 (01:19:08):
Wasn't that you last Thursday?

Speaker 4 (01:19:10):
No, it wasn't me.

Speaker 2 (01:19:11):
I thought it was maybe not did he? I don't know?

Speaker 4 (01:19:15):
Uh me, I'm gonna look.

Speaker 2 (01:19:18):
Yeah, that does tickle something on me. You're right? Uh
poor choice of words. Uh yeah, said the yeah. Uh.
He got some interesting response to the tweet. Mike Benn says,
have you ever noticed Enigma's never age?

Speaker 4 (01:19:36):
Yeah, he participated participated in drag performances in his youth.

Speaker 2 (01:19:40):
So yeah, why didn't you say it was in a
drag show? Then? Well, I didn't know cross dressing.

Speaker 4 (01:19:45):
I said cross dresser.

Speaker 2 (01:19:46):
But wasn't he a cross dresser? Yes, boomer, drag show.

Speaker 4 (01:19:52):
I was yelling fun at a festival, sue me for
having a life, he.

Speaker 2 (01:19:55):
Said, he's not he's not my bench. Have you ever
noticed Enigma's never age? And Santos replied, because we don't
do drugs. Keep giving the swamp hello. And maybe he's

(01:20:17):
a complete scum bag. He just doesn't strike me as
being a complete scumbag. He might be, but eighty seven again,
it is. It's the selective punishment of these people because I,
you know, did he do I don't even know what

(01:20:39):
the hell he did? It was illegal. I know they
said wire fraud and all that. But you'll pluck any
member randomly out of Congress and I'll bet you they've
done equally heinous things.

Speaker 4 (01:20:52):
He pled guilty to identity theft and wire fraud.

Speaker 2 (01:20:56):
There you go. Yeah, and again if you don't, they'll
they'll break you. I mean they'll you will be broke,
as in you won't have any money. So anyway, he's
gonna go do his time and he'll be back. Uh
in just a second, we'll get into the story about
the giant elon head. Oh, I saw that flooding around

(01:21:20):
the country. That's crazy. Uh, hell, I didn't you know.
I realized what I forgot to do ron, I forgot
to grab my snizz.

Speaker 4 (01:21:34):
Well, we all want you to grab your snizz. I
know I'm gonna.

Speaker 17 (01:21:37):
Grab myz now and I'm gonna pull my sniz up
here because I need some of my maximum relief rub
from uh Getmojo CBD dot com because my my neck
is doing its thing.

Speaker 2 (01:21:54):
And uh, I need it. But if you go to
Getmojo CBD dot com, you'll find a plethora of good
ease that contain CBD and things like EMU oil. And
what do these things do for you? Good stuff? Health,
good health, pain relief. No one likes pain. Well, some

(01:22:16):
people do like pain, but we won't get into that
right now. But if you go there and use the
promo code daily Mojo, you will receive an incredible forty
percent off your order and you can find some of
the when you're dealing with CBD products is again, they

(01:22:38):
are ubiquitous. That means they're everywhere round And the real
key to getting a CBD that works is to find
a good source for it. In other words, not the
gas station, not the best place to buy your CBD stuff.

Speaker 18 (01:22:59):
Yeah, but it was only two Yeah, if it's only
the two dollars at the gas station how to work.

Speaker 2 (01:23:06):
It did not work very well.

Speaker 4 (01:23:07):
It did not work.

Speaker 2 (01:23:09):
It did not work, and so you basically you get
what you pay for. Uh. CBD though that is well sourced,
does amazing, amazing thing. It's natural, it comes from the earth, and.

Speaker 18 (01:23:26):
It's why are you even bringing up the relationship between
THC and CBD if there's because inevitably it will come
up at some point during if you are just investigating CBD,
if you are just now looking into if you if
you if you know CBD, if you've used it.

Speaker 2 (01:23:44):
In the past, you know, the argument is goofy as hell,
you know when they start, oh you can't CBD and
THC and all this.

Speaker 13 (01:23:54):
The the bad name that THC got and that along
with it, hemp and CBD products got was thanks to
that institution known as Oh Yeah, the federal government.

Speaker 2 (01:24:11):
They they went out, they went on a smear campaign.
Just watch the movie Reefer Madness, and they went on
a smear campaign against the hemp industry and the marijuana
industry decades ago, and that resulted in a lot of

(01:24:31):
dinged reputations and quite frankly bad information that was passed
around out there. The real key to finding CBD products
that work is find a company who spends the money
and takes the time to source it correctly and to
put the R and D into it, and who will
do a deal honestly with you, which is the exactly

(01:24:55):
what Patriots Relief does. Tim, who has been on the
program a couple of times, is a he's a good
guy Number one. Number two. When remember the little dust up,
it wasn't even a dust up. It was a misunderstanding.
I think about somebody and their credit card being and

(01:25:17):
Tim's like, oh, no, let me, I want let me
come on and show. I want to talk about this.
I want to get it out there in the open.
Turned out it wasn't them anyway. Yeah, but he's like,
let's hit this heat on. Most companies go no, I
don't know, and they run for the hills. Not Tim.
Jim's like, no, we'll take this head on. Now.

Speaker 4 (01:25:34):
He's a good Christian company and he and he wants
to make sure that everybody's getting the correct information. And
if problems arise, he will hit him head on.

Speaker 2 (01:25:43):
Yeah, yep, he will hit you upside the head. And
then he'll turn around and say, but try some of
this maximum really from because it will make your head
feel better. Perfect, Perfect, But go to get Mojo cbd
dot com and use the promo code daily Mojo. You'll
find highly sourced and highly effective CD CBD products, including

(01:26:05):
tinctures and gummies and all kinds of stuff. It's right
there waiting for you. All you have to do is
hit the little button that says I want it. I
like it, I love it. I want some more of it.
Right yep, that said baby. Get Mojo CBD dot com
promo code Daily Mojo.

Speaker 7 (01:26:29):
Radio your.

Speaker 5 (01:26:49):
Monday, Monday Your.

Speaker 2 (01:26:57):
I feel like I want to start rubbing CBD and
Emo oil in some of the buttons and switches over
here in this room. Know what's going on? Things are,
things are strange. So I saw this story. He's like, wait,
there's a giant head and running around the country to

(01:27:20):
the national parks. Yeah. The headline at Fox News says,
mysterious giant elon musk Head travels America's National Park saying
make America wait again in Wait. This is an anonymous backer.
They shared with Fox News Digital why he commissioned the

(01:27:41):
towering twelve foot sculpture. Kind of wild. So this thing
has been and I had the say, I think I've
got the video of him talking about it all right here.
I think I can. I think I can make this
play for you right there? How's that there's no sound?

Speaker 4 (01:28:09):
Make America again? I don't understand that.

Speaker 2 (01:28:13):
During the high summer season, visitors several America's most iconic
national parks found themselves face to face with that towering
Do you think that looks like him?

Speaker 4 (01:28:25):
Not?

Speaker 2 (01:28:25):
Really, I don't, I mean, I don't. Yeah, it's if
you said that that, I mean, unless you had like
Elon Musk underneath it. I wouldn't look at that and go, hey,
there's Elon's head.

Speaker 4 (01:28:42):
Now with I say under now with longer lines thanks
to doge cut stoves cuts oh to get into the
national parks.

Speaker 2 (01:28:54):
He explained. The sculpture is part protest, part performance art
aimed at drawing at ten too recent layoffs and budget
reductions across the National Park Service. However you feel about
the doggie cuts, and we're using that word tongue in cheek,
the reality is that thousands of people who love these
parks and work to protect them were let go or impacted,

(01:29:18):
and nobody's really talking about it anymore. It sucks when
you lose your job I get it. Believe me, I understand.
When you are a country that is thirty seven trillion,
why am I even I don't you know, I'm preaching
to the choir. We didn't have the money to pay

(01:29:38):
for all of these things. We'd have the money to
pay for all these people to keep working. And when
it comes to national parks, I mean, what is there
to The trash has to be empty, the bathrooms have
to be clean. But couldn't you seriously just leave the

(01:30:00):
gate open and let people drive through Yellowstone? I mean,
what's the Yeah, So this guy chose Mount Rainier for
this weekend's installation, he said, because of the high season
congestion and overflowing parking lots. What it's good to see
that our national parks are being utilized. True, by the way,

(01:30:21):
in see it was a four or five months, I
will be eligible for free. Is it free?

Speaker 4 (01:30:28):
I think it is over a certain age.

Speaker 2 (01:30:31):
No, no, no, no, I get a no, I get a
lifetime pass to all the national parks. I think it's
like sixty bucks, isn't it? Only it's free.

Speaker 4 (01:30:41):
Let me see it's at sixty two?

Speaker 2 (01:30:42):
You said sixty Yeah. Park visitors' reactions were wide ranging.
Some posed for photos, others made rude gestures, and many
simply stared. People crowded around it, took photos, laughed, flipped
it off, gave it thumbs up. He said it ran
the gamut a good cross section of America. Well that's

(01:31:05):
a that's good news. Oh the sculpture.

Speaker 4 (01:31:07):
What when Yeah, when you turn sixty two, you get
you can purchase the America the beautiful National Parks Pass.
It's twenty dollars a year or eighty dollars lifetime.

Speaker 2 (01:31:20):
There you go, because I ain't got that many years
in front of me.

Speaker 4 (01:31:23):
Right, sweet dude, I'm doing that. I know years at
three years, I'm doing it. And then I'm on an
RV and traveling. I'm just going to do the show
from the back of my RV. That's what I'm gonna do.
We can do it together with my with my star
link on the top.

Speaker 2 (01:31:39):
We can travel the highways and byways of this country together.
Wrong hand in hand. We look for something who could uh,
we look for somebody who could do something photo realistic
on a big scale, but still work within a budget. Oh,
so you've got the budget You've got to deal with
when it comes to things you want to get done,

(01:31:59):
but as far as the country goes, hey, we can't
lay off that. We don't have the money to pay him.
That's cold, I did right there. It really is irony.
We really wanted the smirk, the very self satisfied look
as Really, the more I look at it, the more

(01:32:21):
it does not look like him. As for the sign
make America, wait again, that was no accident. Ah Ah, yep, yep, yep, yep.
The nod to a certain president's famous slogan is deliberate,
the Backer admitted. But it isn't meant to target any
particular political side. It's meant to spark conversation. Okay, good, well,

(01:32:44):
we can conversate about it. Everyone has an opinion about
Elon Musk, but I wanted this to cut across political lines.
When asked why he insists on remaining anonymous pussy, the
Backer didn't dodge the question. There's something fun about the mystery,
he said. It's not important who I am. It's about
what this statue represents. Pussy images of the Musk bust

(01:33:10):
have set Reddit a blaze. Comments from just one post
from reddit picks include somehow it looks both better and
worse than Elon wonder who paid for it? They captured
his smugness perfectly. Do you think Elon Musk is smug um?

Speaker 4 (01:33:27):
He might be, but I don't think it's because he
wants to be.

Speaker 2 (01:33:31):
He's he's got the tarred in him, right, he had
a little bit of Yeah, he gets a little tired
in him. That's okay. I've got a lot of tared ron.
You've got some tired in me.

Speaker 4 (01:33:40):
You've got some tarred in me?

Speaker 2 (01:33:42):
A little more?

Speaker 4 (01:33:43):
No, I've got enough.

Speaker 2 (01:33:45):
Thank you? Did you lock the door so Misty can't
get in?

Speaker 4 (01:33:53):
You don't even know the map of it. I'm telling
you right now, you don't.

Speaker 2 (01:33:56):
I've locked the door. Hissuy, he's not getting in this
one either. U. Things happen in our country, real damaging things.
We forgot them because the news cycle spins so fast.
I don't disagree with that. This is allowed, silly way
not to forget. Yeah. When asked what he'd say directly
to Musk, he didn't hesitate. Quote stick to making cars

(01:34:18):
and stay out of screwing up the government end quote.
How did Elon Musk screw up the government? Aside from
pointing out all of the crap that we're wasting money
on national parks to waste No, Well, we can have
a discussion about the national parks. And if there are parks,

(01:34:41):
how come we can be told when we can and
can't go in them? Yeah? You ever think about that?
Just saying because we are way it's going to come
as a shock to some people. We are way out
of money in this country, way out of money a
long time and for a long time. And it ain't

(01:35:03):
getting any better. Uh well, I take that back. It
is getting better. It is getting better to the to
the degree that and and you want to see this
in the mainstream media. But the tariff thing, there's there's
some good news with the tariffs. And there's also another

(01:35:24):
branch of government I say branch of government, another agency
in the government with four letters is being attacked as well,
and they're got mass layoffs. It's crazy. I mean, we
don't have the money to pay for all this stuff,
so we're not We'll get to that and just a

(01:35:47):
sad But I think, Ron, do you have words of
wisdom that you would like to lay honest? Yeah, yeah,
lay on me.

Speaker 4 (01:35:55):
As reading the news this weekend. This week's Twizzy is
based around Jay Leno's latest comment about the late night
comedy in that fiasco that's been.

Speaker 1 (01:36:05):
Happening, the way I see it, this is Ron's wonky
perspective on.

Speaker 2 (01:36:10):
Life late night comedy. Oh how the mighty have fallen?

Speaker 4 (01:36:16):
Jay Leno, the king of keeping it neutral, just through
a haymaker at today's crop of so called comedians, and
quite honestly, I'm here for it. According to Fox, Leno's
fed up with these woke gesters alienating half their audience
with partisan drivel. And let's be real, he's spitting facts, folks.
Modern late night shows aren't comedy. They're DNC propaganda with
a laugh track. Remember when Johnny Carson or Leno himself

(01:36:39):
could roast both sides without.

Speaker 2 (01:36:41):
Picking a team.

Speaker 4 (01:36:42):
You'd get a Clinton jab, a bush zinger, and everyone laughed.
Now it's like tuning into a lecture hall where the
professor's wearing skinny jeans and a superiority complex. Kimmel, Colbert,
you know that guy with the arc. Every night it's
the same tired stick orange man, bad conservatives, dumb please
clap like train seals. Half the country sitting there thinking, wow,

(01:37:03):
I paid for cable to be insulted. Leno's point is
Goald comedy is supposed to unite, not divide, But these
clowns are too busy preaching to their blue state choir
to notice they're tanking their own ratings. You've got col
Beart smirking through another Trump monologue, while Middle America is like, bro,
I just wanted a chuckle, not a sermon, and don't
get me started on the applause breaks. Every punch line

(01:37:25):
is a policy pitch, and the audience claps harder than
a room full of interns at a Biden rally.

Speaker 2 (01:37:30):
The kicker, they're not even funny.

Speaker 4 (01:37:32):
It's just lazy, predictable jabs that land softer than a
feather pillow. Want to make a conservative laugh, try telling
a joke that doesn't sound like it was scripted by
Rachel Maddow's intern. Leno's right, alienate half your audience and
you're not a comedian. You're a pundit with worse hair.
Bring back real comedy, where the only agenda is making
us all snort soda out our nose, not picking sides

(01:37:53):
in the culture war. Until then, I'm sticking to reruns
at the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. You know when
late that was actually worth staying up for. I'm Rod Phelips,
and that's the way I see it.

Speaker 1 (01:38:05):
The way I see it, it's only on the Daily
Mojo dot com. You're listening to the lunatic fringe of
American radio, the Daily Mojo.

Speaker 4 (01:38:24):
What's going on there?

Speaker 2 (01:38:27):
I know what was going on there?

Speaker 4 (01:38:29):
Nothing on this side. Could you hear it?

Speaker 2 (01:38:33):
It was a I heard some crackling and stuff. I
don't know. I think we're being spied on. I think
the NSA. I think I think they're just trying to
listen to all our stuff. See John Clatt Senior says again,
woman pilot, let me guess she hit the wall of

(01:38:54):
the hangar while back in the plane out what happened?
I don't know. I charge? Have you a National part? Yeah?
Oh yeah, Nathan Nathan Donald says, correct me if I'm wrong.
But don't they charge a hefty entry fee at the
National parks that should pay for the workers end up? Yeah?
I agree. And part of the problem, well is that

(01:39:15):
part of the problem. When we were in Vegas as
last year whenever it was and we wanted to I
just wanted to drive down to the edge of Lake Mead,
and look and see how far the water line was
down and turn around and leave. And we pulled up
to the gate and as like it was before we

(01:39:37):
had the passes, and she's like, do you have a
patent now, Well, that'll be thirty dollars. I said, well,
we just, honestly, we just want to drive down there
and literally look and take up it and come drive
back thirty dollars thirty bucks.

Speaker 4 (01:39:51):
They don't care. I'm like, they don't care.

Speaker 2 (01:39:55):
No, I'm not paying thirty dollars to drive down there,
take up it and drive back. You can turn right
here and exit, which is exactly what I did. I mean,
I get it. You can't ask for special treatment. But
it's not like there was a line of one hundred people.
I think there may have been one other car. So

(01:40:16):
it's everything is screwed up. If you haven't downloaded the
Daily Mojo app, do so today. If you do it today,
no one gets hurt, unless, of course you want to.
And in that case, yeah, uh. And several people have
said they're going to be sending us their birthday gift.
Oh I love it. I know me too, especially with

(01:40:39):
boxes of money. Uh. And the your the tuzzy this
week on Leno. I just I saw this headline over
Rolling Stone, and this is this is what we've said forever.
Why shoot for half your audience? Why or half an audience?
If if you take us, you are alienating half of

(01:41:05):
your potential audience. It makes no sense to do what
they have been doing. It makes no sense unless the
program is being used as a political tool. Then that
does make sense. Great, correct, makes perfect sense, which is

(01:41:25):
what they've been doing. They've been using the late night
shows as a political tool as advertising against Trump for
the past ten years. That's all they've been and it's
been worth it to the media to make the mainstream media.
It's been worth it to them because they've also been

(01:41:46):
getting leaned on by the government. Yep, the machine hates Trump,
has always hated Trump. And so you've got this machine
leaning on the networks. Who you know, they've got the
power over the network's, they've got the they've got the
power of the FCC license. I mean, it's just it's
the it's the perfect setup.

Speaker 4 (01:42:07):
Well, dude, Well, we've talked about SNL many times. They
turned SNL into that over the over the past ten ten.

Speaker 2 (01:42:16):
Years or so.

Speaker 4 (01:42:16):
Yeah, I mean it used to It used to be funny.
It used to be funny. They would cut back and forth.
Come on, Bill Murray, it okay in those days.

Speaker 2 (01:42:27):
Oh I get it, okay, Ron, I don't want it
used to be that's fifty years ago.

Speaker 4 (01:42:33):
Fifty forty, fifty years ago, yes.

Speaker 2 (01:42:36):
I grifty.

Speaker 4 (01:42:37):
But it was funny then.

Speaker 2 (01:42:40):
Years ago.

Speaker 4 (01:42:41):
Was it funny because I wasn't in politics at that
time and I didn't care or or were they.

Speaker 2 (01:42:48):
First of all, it was fifty years ago, and when
they still made fun of Gerald Ford.

Speaker 4 (01:42:53):
They made fun of everybody back then.

Speaker 2 (01:42:55):
Yes, And it was it was hight, jovial, light hearted humor.
It wasn't this mean spirited, dark humor that they try
to pass off as comedy today. And it's just it's
not funny. It's just And I don't think Stephen Colbert
is funny at all. Yeah, there's just you know, I

(01:43:18):
didn't realize that joke don't make sense.

Speaker 4 (01:43:20):
Stephen Colbert. I didn't realize. And I don't know why
I didn't realize this, But that was the Late show
that used to be David Letterman. Yeah I didn't really
David Letterman created it. Yes, yeah, I know that now,
But I didn't realize that he was the transition.

Speaker 2 (01:43:39):
I don't know why I did, but I don't know
he didn't either.

Speaker 4 (01:43:42):
David Letterman was funny.

Speaker 2 (01:43:44):
I thought I thought he had his moments. Yeah, that's
like the top ten lists there are.

Speaker 4 (01:43:53):
There were some good ones there were, but yeah, I mean,
you know, back in the nineties, back in the nine
and he's late and not was decent, decently fun You
had Leno's from early nineties, you had Leno Johnny Carson
before him.

Speaker 2 (01:44:08):
Yeah, David Johnny Carson was the best. There's no Yeah,
there's no replacing Carson. And then he retired and died.
Don't ever retire, You'll die, by.

Speaker 4 (01:44:18):
The way, listened to his audiobook, his bio, I mean
his biography. That's it's a crazy story Johnny Carson. Oh yeah,
he's got a crazy story.

Speaker 2 (01:44:29):
Yeah. I used to know his personal assistant, Helen, and uh,
we had some good times sometimes. I'm just gonna leave
it right there. Back to the layoffs and what you
know are the things that we can't afford, the people
in the government that we can't afford. This is over

(01:44:52):
at space dot Com. NASAID now is under attack. These
Space Agency employees and lawmakers are protesting mass layout of
science cuts amid budget turmoil. This is at space dot Com.
They're telling everyone to jump ship. So there sounds to
me like they're offering them those the payouts right The

(01:45:16):
early retirement National scientists engineers demanding Congress helped turn down
the heat on an agency whose current leadership, they say
is burning down American dominance in space and science? American dominance?
Are we dominant in America in space and science?

Speaker 4 (01:45:37):
I'd like to think we are, but I don't know
that we are.

Speaker 2 (01:45:41):
I don't know that we are either. I'm with you.
I'd like to think we are, but I don't know.
A group of NASA employees, contractors, their families, friends, and
other supporters gathered across the across from the Smithsonian National
Air and Space Museum last week, the anniversary of humanity's
historic first landing on the Moon. Nearly one hundred showed

(01:46:02):
up on Sunday. One hundred people well you don't say uh,
to protest the deep budget cuts and mass layoffs at
the Space Agency.

Speaker 15 (01:46:12):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:46:13):
Protesters, including the ad hoc organizing group called NASA needs help. UH. Yeah,
I don't have. I have trouble finding sympathy for an
agency who doesn't have a problem getting up and saying, yeah,
we threw away the plans for the technology that got

(01:46:35):
you know, got us to we threw away the instructions.
Yeah wait, you what, how how do you even what
does that even mean? How do you throw away the
Yeah we recorded over the original tips?

Speaker 11 (01:46:55):
You what?

Speaker 2 (01:46:57):
Well, I couldn't afford new ones. You know, there's a
bad we just I mean, it's been so and and
then when you watch documentaries like the one that they
did on the on the Space Shuttle and the explosion
of the Challenger, and you see how NASA the agency

(01:47:21):
treated astronauts, they're like cattle. I mean, I just I
don't I get the impression they didn't treat them well
from that documentary. Now, there's two sides to every story.
I will say this, having grown up near Edwards Air
Force Base and you know, hanging around the pool with

(01:47:45):
those guys, the test pilots and those the guys who
would go on to do pretty incredible things. Never forget,
one of them told me if I if I told
you what I know about UFOs, we'd both be dead.
That was the what is that?

Speaker 4 (01:48:00):
What got you into it? At the very beginning.

Speaker 2 (01:48:03):
No, No, I was already now, I was already that
I asked him about UFOs because I was doing the
series for the National Network. But those guys are pretty
damned amazing. But this agency, NASA is it's like any
other government agency. It is not run well. They've got,

(01:48:26):
you know, the black budgets, which I used to be
okay with until they betrayed my trust too, and then
I'm like, no, we don't get to sorry, don't get
to have the black budgets anymore. That's the problem. We
can't trust the people who are running everything. So the
people that these people that are protesting the NASA layoffs

(01:48:47):
are saying that management now is telling everybody below them
to take the deferred resignation program now to jump ship.
This is going to weaken NASA and it's going to
weaken the United States, is it? Yeah? I love this one.
Look at this sign right, there was another picture. There

(01:49:13):
is fund fund NASA, not ICE, I mean one giant
leap back fund NASA Science. Or how about we look
for other ways like with SpaceX. Look what the public

(01:49:37):
private partnership has been able to accomplish with SpaceX and
Blue Origin for that matter. It's funny how when you
put the capitalist spin on something, how oh, well we
can get it done that way and faster and usually
for less money.

Speaker 4 (01:49:56):
It's there's and there's a lot more flexibility. I mean,
that's the thing, big time. There's no bureaucratic red tape.
You don't have to go through Congress to launch SpaceX
rockets or New Origin rocket. You just don't.

Speaker 2 (01:50:11):
It's everything in the government. As we've said a million times,
everything up there right now is broken big time. It's
going to take a lot, it's going to take many,
many years, like decades, if we can, in fact pull
out of this mess. I'm hoping that we can. It's

(01:50:33):
still kind of iffy at this point. But you go
back fifteen years to Jesus Is April sixteenth, twenty ten,
is it? The Washington Post At Space Center, Obama defends
changes in the NASA program. Answering critics, he says he

(01:50:53):
is one hundred percent committed to the agency. President Obama
told an enthusiastic crowd to Kennedy Space Center that NASA
should aim to send astronauts to explore asteroids beyond the
Moon by twenty twenty five.

Speaker 4 (01:51:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:51:10):
Right, and visit Mars in the next decade, which would
have been twenty twenty. How did that work out? Really?

Speaker 13 (01:51:19):
Has it?

Speaker 2 (01:51:20):
Yeah? Yeah, yeah, not so much. Responding to congressional agency
critics who say changes he had proposed in his February
budget would kill the human space program, the President said
he is one hundred percent committed to the mission of
NASA and its future. What are they I'm probably being

(01:51:41):
too harsh on them, because I'm sure that between twenty
ten and now, NASA has accomplished some pretty amazing things,
have they not? Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:51:49):
Yeah, like what amazing stuff? You know, like what like
that thing? Amazing? Okay, that's amazing.

Speaker 2 (01:51:58):
And I'm being serious. I don't know, and I'm sure
that they have done something. I just can't think of
anything right now that they've done that's amazing.

Speaker 4 (01:52:06):
They didn't, well they haven't. I mean forty years ago
they started on Artemis. I don't know if it's gotten
anywhere yet.

Speaker 2 (01:52:13):
But wait, isn't that the one that keeps blowing up?

Speaker 5 (01:52:17):
No?

Speaker 4 (01:52:18):
Didn't what that boeings? Is that Artemis? The one that
Artemis is the one? Artemis is the plan to send
people back to the Moon. That's NASA's plan Artemis.

Speaker 2 (01:52:29):
Now, NASA's Artemis one mission has successfully launched.

Speaker 4 (01:52:33):
That's the one that went around the Moon came back.

Speaker 2 (01:52:38):
This is from the Planetary Society, November fifteenth, twenty twenty two. Yeah,
NASA's Artemis one mission has successfully launched. Today, NASA's successfully
launched it's Artemis one mission, marking the first of several
missions the agency has planned to return humans to the Moon.

Speaker 4 (01:52:58):
Didn't they have a problem with Artemis two.

Speaker 2 (01:53:01):
Yeah, they've had problems with pretty much everything they've done,
have they not for the past fifteen twenty years since
the and the Space Shuttle program. While it did, I'm
brobably being too hard on him, but it did. Did
bit delayed what it was planning potential. Yeah, they were

(01:53:25):
gonna send Artemis. Yeah, Artemis two was planned for November
twenty four to send crew members to the Moon, even
if just to orbit it. It's now scheduled for spring
of twenty six. Primarily it was delayed primarily due to
issues with the Orion spacecraft's heat shield. That's where the
problem was. Orion. That was the wasn't that built by Boeing? Well?

(01:53:51):
Was it the same?

Speaker 1 (01:53:52):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (01:53:52):
That's not the The Orion was a different craft than
what was supposed to bring the astronam's home from the
space space station? Right?

Speaker 4 (01:54:06):
Is that what that was?

Speaker 2 (01:54:07):
Uh, I'm saying it wasn't It wasn't o right, what
was what was the craft that was going to bring
uh the astronauts back from the space station? Because that, Oh, yeah,
it didn't work either. It's like nothing that they nothing
that they've tried or nothing. It seems it appears to

(01:54:30):
me anyway that everything that they do they have the
fecal touch with. Now maybe I'm wrong.

Speaker 4 (01:54:36):
Oh the star Liner, the Boeing star Liner, that's where
that's where I'm getting Boeing mixed into this. Yeah, it
was the Boeing star Liner that went up and they went, no,
can't do it.

Speaker 2 (01:54:46):
Yeah, it's leaking. Remember have it had a fuel leak? Right?

Speaker 4 (01:54:52):
Hot draw? I mean, uh helium leak?

Speaker 2 (01:54:54):
Yeah? Yeah, what the hell was helium in a spacecraft?

Speaker 4 (01:55:00):
Well it's not for them all to talk funny, it's
I'm sure it's for.

Speaker 2 (01:55:05):
Well, if you listen to Hank Johnson, it would be
imagine kid's birthday parties without helium, and they make the
funny voices and we wonder why government is screwed up.
But NASA can't get out of its own way for
whatever reason. Is it bad management? I mean, we have

(01:55:28):
the all of the hearings that we had with regard
to UAPs or UFOs, and they got up there and
looked like a bunch of clowns when they were trying
to talk about that. I mean, nothing that they have
done really fills you full of hope, hope and pride

(01:55:50):
and any sort of optim optimism over their future projects.
They don't seem to be able to get out their
own way now, like Apollo thirteen when they were able
to do what they did with that Amaze balls. Yeah,
I mean heroes, totally hero and getting to the Moon

(01:56:10):
eventually amazing. But again, what and for the bazillion dollars
that we've been spending on them, what have they done lately?
They've done this, this, and this. I'm sure they have
the Orion spacecraft. This is again going back to twenty
twenty two. If all goes according to Planet, should take

(01:56:32):
the uncrewed Orion spacecraft less than ten minutes to reach
its initial orbit around Earth. After Orion separates from the
SLS upper stage, the upper stage will deploy ten cube
SATs one by one, including a solar sail called the
NEA Scout. Was it ever able to do all that?

Speaker 4 (01:56:51):
I don't think so.

Speaker 2 (01:56:53):
Orion's forty two day voyage will culminate with the Orion
spacecraft splashing down the Pacific off the coast of San Diego,
where it will be towed to the well deck of
a US Navy ship. Okay. Though the Artemis program has
been tested by economic, political, environmental, and engineering challenges, today's

(01:57:13):
long anticipated moment was well worth the wait. This is
again back in twenty twenty two. They've not been in
crap good the time. Yeah, we'll start talking about space
and I just get lost in it, lost in it. Yeah,
and your eyes. I'm sorry. It's time to go. Hell,
wait a minutes, let's go Hell, I've got to go. Right,

(01:57:35):
There's two hours of bitching about NASA and the government
known as a daily Mojo for today, Monday, the twenty
eighth day of July, the year of our lard, twenty
twenty five. Did anybody learn a damn thing other than
nacay can't get out of their own way? Let's find out.
Let's start open the rumble chat room. Ewon Guru says
Space nineteen ninety nine. The Moon breaks out of Earth's

(01:57:56):
orbit and gets lost in space. Of course that would
destroy your so them trying to get home was kind
of dumb. See that was the problem I have with
Moonfall the movie. Yeah did you did you watch.

Speaker 4 (01:58:08):
The uh with hallick Berry?

Speaker 2 (01:58:12):
Sure? Yeah, I mean the premise is just so it
doesn't even didn't make any sense to me. See, Space
was made in a Hollywood basement. Original babe says, Wow,
you're such a conspiracy theorist. Uhcenzo one twenty five? When

(01:58:35):
are we going to eur atus? Yeah? Uh see if
they believe this sending stuff to the moon, et cetera,
they might as well watch MSM mainstream media because it's
just as true. Right, it's all a lie. Everything is

(01:58:55):
all alie that says, boys, know what the act nam
NASA stands for, not actually Space Agency? Uh huh uh
huh DNSDM. Cutting the waste from the Department of the
Interior is necessary. Of course, this round of cuts was
mostly seasonal employees, you know, the ones who actually do
the work. That bloated Union of DC Civil Servants. Yeah,

(01:59:19):
their jobs are all intact. I know. It's frustrating as hell,
one step at a time. What's this real? Pope? Previews
to thirty says what are they hiding? Minnesota Secretary of
State's office says it will not share voter registration list
with the Dojo. Guess we'll be talking about tomorrow, won't we, Right, Ron, Yes, sir, right, Okay.

(01:59:42):
I hope your door's locked in your well armed because
I think I saw a misty coming down the hall.
Remember for the rest of you that we the people
must hang together. Otherwise mishall, Shirley, hang, hang separately, six separate,
TRANDUS resists stupid and good night.

Speaker 4 (01:59:55):
Doc Thompson, wherever you are tuck duck and covered

Speaker 1 (01:59:59):
Wash at The Dailymojo dot com
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