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August 12, 2025 120 mins
August 12, 2025

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"Ep 081225: Day Of The Skank Weasel | The Daily MoJo"

The content delves into the origins of 'America the Beautiful', inspired by Catherine Lee Bates and her experiences in Kansas. It reflects on the history of Montgomery Ward and its competition with Sears, alongside nostalgia for the Sears catalog. The discussion also covers visual perception, the impact of telehealth, and the evolution of technology. Additionally, it addresses societal changes regarding gender identity and the effects of social media on communication.

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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. You
are about to participate in a great adventure. Now the
age what's sixty? He's just going to break back radio
with an attitude. This system that we love is broken.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
I know that, dude, not comply. Welcome to another two
hours of common sense. That liberty and justice for all
is a myth and euretic behavior.

Speaker 1 (00:34):
I want to, you can't, and when you do, you
wish you did.

Speaker 3 (00:37):
This is your daily Mojo.

Speaker 1 (00:41):
All right, say it with me now, Oh beautiful, for
beautiful halcyon skies, for amber waves of grain, for purple
mountain majesties, above the routed plane. Wrong, it's above the
enameled plane, enamels playing America, America, God shed his grace

(01:05):
on the that's the next line. I don't know, because
you've probably changed it till soul's wax, fair as Earth
and air and music hearted sea. I don't know why
you don't know the words to America the beautiful? Are

(01:25):
you not a patriotic American?

Speaker 4 (01:28):
No?

Speaker 5 (01:28):
I am, But that's not the words unless that's the
real world.

Speaker 1 (01:31):
Those are the original words. Those were the original words
to the poem. Pike's Peak written in eighteen ninety three
by a woman Kathy Baits, who you probably saw in
the movie Misery. Oh it's not hold on it. No,
it's not the same. Sorry, it's different. Kathy Baits Catherine

(01:53):
Lee Baits. She was born this day in eighteen fifty nine.
August twelfth, eighteen fifty nine. She wrote the words to
the American patriotic him America the Beautiful. She originally, though,
wrote the words as the poem Pike's Peak, which was
inspired by a trip to Colorado. She witnessed the wheat

(02:16):
fields of Kansas, and let me just I doubt that
she was on what is the highway that goes through
I can't remember which highway it is, but I drove
once from Nashville to Denver, and on the trip, you
drive through Kansas, and you go through, You go through

(02:39):
Kansas for a long and there is nothing. There is
a tree, and you see the tree coming from about
one hundred miles away, and you see the tree, and
you passed the tree, and the tree is behind you,
and you see the tree is the thing you notice
because that's really pretty much all there is between there
and Denver, but it is and then suddenly out of

(03:03):
the mist. You see the rocky mountains, they really do
just they pop into existence right there. So I can
understand why she was blown away by this. She witnessed
wheat fields of Kansas and the majestic view of the
great planes from Pike's Peak. Now there was a revised
version of her poem. It was combined with music from

(03:24):
Samuel A. Ward, who, of course, was you know Montgomery Wards.
The No, I'm sorry, I'm told that is a different Ward. No,
it was okay, that was completely different, that Samuel Award,
completely different than Montgomery Wards. For those of you under
one hundred, Montgomery Wards was like Walmart at the time, right, yeah,

(03:45):
I remember monkey Wards. I do. They had a little
it was like a hardware store, had everything you needed
one place. When they go out of business, I haven't
seen the monkey Wards in a long why'd they call
them monkey Wards? Remember calling the monkey Wards.

Speaker 5 (04:00):
To say that than Montgomery I guess, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (04:04):
Were people that lazy? Two? Less simple people were major
American department stores. Stay in the chain that began as
a mail order business back in eighteen seventy two, expanded
into retail stores became a prominent competitor to Sears. For
those of you Ondree, hundred Seers was a store, but

(04:24):
you couldn't get away, for it was everywhere you You
ran across Seers in every small town in America. And now,
of course there are how many seris is are there?

Speaker 5 (04:35):
Are there even any left?

Speaker 1 (04:37):
Oh? Yeah, there's there's at least one. How many Sears
stores are left? As of late twenty twenty four, there
were eight Seers stores there probably parks next to a
k Mart. There's only no because only two k Marts left.

(05:01):
And remember Kmart bought Sears, which was really freaky because
it was like, what the hell Kmart butts if I
figured it would have been the other way around. The
eight Seers that were left for Braintree, Massachusetts. Burbank conquered Wittier,
all in California, Miami and Orlando and Florida, Al Paso
and then uh San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Speaker 5 (05:24):
I used to love to get the Sears catalog every year.

Speaker 1 (05:28):
You were the little pervy. No, it was smelled. The
bra page smelled the same as the rest of it,
as the tool pages and everything else. You looked at
the women's underwear. I probably did of course you did toys.
That catalog was two inches thick if I remember correctly. Yeah,

(05:48):
and you know who took lessons from them? You line? Yeah,
U line kills more trees on an annual basis to
send out their their catl I just don't understand why
they But anyway, so different Montgomery Ward. But back to
the poem. Eighteen ninety three was the original poem Beautiful

(06:09):
for Halcyon Skies. Do you know what halcian means? I don't.
I always thought that was a fire extinguisher because you
have the halcion. Oh yeah, the house, yeah gas, It
sucks the oxygen out of the room. But apparently halcion
denotes a period of time in the past that was

(06:31):
idyllically happy and peaceful halcion much like the eighties. Yeah,
much like the eighties. So let's see here the remainder
of the for Halcyon Skies, for amber waves of Grain,
for purple Mountain Majesties above the enameled plane America, America,

(06:53):
God shed his grace on the till souls wax fair
as earth and air, and music hearted c sea. Of course,
we all know the the second verse of America, the
beautiful no, right, no, I don't. I'm not sure I've

(07:15):
ever heard this one. Oh beautiful, we live in a simulation.
Oh beautiful for pilgrim feet, what the actual phenorica?

Speaker 5 (07:29):
It was the buckles. It was the buckles.

Speaker 1 (07:32):
Whose stern impassion stress. A thoroughfare for freedom beat across
the wilderness America, America. God shed his grace on the
till paths be wrought through wilds of thought by pilgrim
foot and knee. It's probably just my twisted mind, but

(07:54):
when I think about pilgrims on their knees, it's just
a little weird to me. But that's just me. Thank you,
Dark Magneto. Pilgrim pride, which sounds like it should be
a breakfast cereal. You want to be involved in the
program today? By the way, this is your daily mojo
for Tuesday, August the twelfth, the year of our Lord,

(08:15):
twenty twenty five, and we are just getting started. U
Oh beautiful for glory, tale of liberating strife, when once
and twice for man's avail, men lavished precious life America, America.
God shed his grace on thee till selfish gain no

(08:36):
longer staying the banner of the free. The hell's hurt
those words. This is again the original eighteen ninety three
poem written by Kathy Bits. Not that Kathy baits Catherine.
She was an a horse and buggy traveling well, yeah, eighteen.

(09:01):
Then there was a nineteen oh four version that came
out still mentions feet. Apparently the I guess the current
version mentions feet too. Oh beautiful for spacious guys above
the that's when they changed above the fruited plain. They
kept feet in there the across the America America. God

(09:26):
mend thine every flaw confirmed, thy soul in self control,
thy liberty in law, O beautiful for glory, tale of
liberating strife, when valiantly for man's a veil, men lavished
precious life. America America. May God thy gold refine till

(09:48):
all success be nobleness and every gain divine. This is
nineteen oh four. Still had our eye on the prize.
Back then it seemed like we were still where we
had been as a whole. How many people were in
the country in nineteen oh four, and he.

Speaker 5 (10:07):
Guesses nineteen oh four, I don't know, one hundred and
fifteen million, don't.

Speaker 1 (10:18):
Let's see here, uh, nineteen oh four. Population of the
United States was approximately eighty two point one million, so
still a far cry from uh oak, and that was
a one point nine, but it was about a two
percent increase over the previous year. So still we had,
you know, a relatively small group of people here in

(10:40):
the country been in nineteen eleven. The the nineteen eleven
version pretty much pretty much over all the same. A beautiful,
spacious guy amberwaves green and purple mountain majesties above the
fruited plain, America. God shed his grace on the and
crown thy good with brotherhood from sea to shining sea.

(11:04):
That's the one we all know and love. And yet
the second verse, or technically I guess, would be a stanza,
oh beautiful for pilgrim feet, What what is it with
people and fate? And then the third stands, O beautiful
for heroes proved in liberating strife with more than with more,

(11:29):
with more than self, their country loved, and mercy more
than life. Again, still striving for the best America, America.
May God Thy gold refine till all success be nobleness
and every gain divine, Oh beautiful for patriot dream that
sees beyond the years, Thine Alabaster's cities gleam undimmed by

(11:54):
human tears, America America. God shed his grace on thee
and crown thy good with brotherhood from sea to shining sea.
Catherine Lee Bates, who, no, she did not. It's got
her life here as eighteen eighty to eighteen ninety. No,

(12:18):
that's no, no, no, she lived longer than that. But
she was a handsome woman. Katherine Lee Bates had the
librarian thing going on, didn't she sure did. Yeah, watch
out for that that type right there. Take off the
glasses and put down there, get you going down there?
Oh the hair go, yeah, and you just see her.

(12:42):
She was something else. And then we fast forward what
one hundred or so years, and here we are in
the year of our Lord, twenty twenty five, and we
have people like Adam Schiff run in the country I made.
It's just hmmm, let me tell you something. We turns

(13:06):
out that, oh, if you knew this or not, but
he's considered by many to be a weasel, with all
due respect to he looks like that's good with me.
He is a pencil neck. He is a pencil neck.
He is. And we find out now that he apparently
was the the one that Oki Dokie the leak of

(13:29):
classified intel to hurt Donald Trump. Is anyone surprised, let
me see, No, I don't. Why would anybody be surprised
by this? My question is who is really pulling the
strings of Adam Schiff. You know, he's he's a puppet.
He's that's all he is. He's a puppet. Somebody is

(13:50):
pulling his strings. Somebody with money is put All of
these people are puppets, which is why they hate Donald Trump,
because he's not a puppet. Tell him you're not a puppet. Ron,
I'm not a puppet. Damn straight, I'm not a puppet.
But Donald Trump is the one guy who's not a

(14:11):
puppet who does now his detractors will so of course
he's a Russian puppet. Yeah no, that's what they've tried
to pin on him now for years.

Speaker 6 (14:22):
Ye.

Speaker 1 (14:22):
By the way, again, I'm going to go back to
the Epstein thing. If again, if Donald Trump was in
the Epstein files, would that not have come out by now?

Speaker 5 (14:30):
You would think so, But boy, the Democrats are sure
trying to get it pushed. Now.

Speaker 1 (14:34):
Remember the Epstein files. Yeah, anybody Epstein files? So last
week so long ago, right, So apparently it's a whistle
draw a whistleblower. A career intelligence officer who worked for
Democrats in the House Intelligence Committee for more than a decade.
According to the story at Just the News, he tried

(14:57):
to he repeatedly warned the FBI be getting back in
twenty seventeen that then Representative Adam Schiff had approved leaking
classified information to smear then President Donald Trump over the
now debunked Russia Gates scandal, the Ppe tape. According to
bombshell FBI memos that Director Cash Pattel has turned over

(15:18):
to Congress. The FBI three to two interview reports obtained
by Just the News state the intelligence staffer, a Democrat
by party affiliation, who described himself as a friend to
both Schiff, who is now a Senator, and former Republican
House Intelligence Chairman Devin Nunius, considered the classified leaking to

(15:40):
be unethical, illegal, and treasonous. So even though he's a Democrat,
he had some he had some morals about him, which again,
there are people that are there good people in the
Democrat Party. Absolutely misguided, Yeah, in a lot of ways
in leadership though the Democrats are a bunch of skank weasels.

(16:05):
With all apologies to scank weasels, they're just and quite frankly,
there are enough on the Republican side to warrant the
same description there, but the Democrat Party just seems to
use and reek of nastiness and always have. Uh. This

(16:25):
whistleblower was told not to worry about it because Schiff
believed he would be spared prosecution under the Constitution's Speech
and debate claus. I wonder why Adam Schiff was given
the pardon by Biden, doesn't it? I mean, why would
you get a pardon for Yeah, you know you haven't done.
What did Adam Shift do? Come on? Why you being

(16:49):
so down on the little dweeb? You think he got
the ship beat out of Milan School.

Speaker 5 (16:54):
Oh, there's no doubt. That's why he's got like this
complex now.

Speaker 1 (17:01):
It wouldn't it? I mean that right there is enough
to make you want to go back to like the
eighties and beat the snot at Adam Shift. Is that wrong?
Is that wrong? I mean? Is that just an example
of us here on this side of the fence just
being violence bongering, a holes, vindictive. I'm not even being vindictive.

(17:23):
I just look at him and I just want to
hit him.

Speaker 5 (17:25):
And he's got a punchable face. He does, he does,
he's kind of a look at him, he's a ship face. Yeah, Yeah,
that's Chuck Todd there.

Speaker 1 (17:35):
But and Chuck Todd strangely has kind of that same
Chuck Todd is one of those guys that when he
opens his mouth, he you want to punch him too.
For whatever reason. Boy do I miss Tim Russeerd. So
this is an interview between obviously Dingle Nuts there and

(17:56):
Adam shift back in. But this was this is twenty nineteen.
I got time flies, doesn't it.

Speaker 7 (18:08):
Our priority is to make sure the president of United
States is working in the national interest, that he is
not motivated by some pecuniary interest or fear of compromise
or actual compromise.

Speaker 1 (18:19):
That's the length and breadth of it. Is he telling
the truth there? Yes, it would be no because his
lips are moving. Yes, of course he's not telling the truth.
And that wasn't about that. That's not what their investigation
was or is about. It was finding a way to
try to take Trump down, which I will remind anybody
who the people I see on social media, they got

(18:41):
him this Yeah, they've got him this time. They've got it.
They sure do you have him this time? Boy, They've
got him. They've got him by the shortened curlyes on this.

Speaker 7 (18:50):
So in terms of the president's business, we're not interested
in our committee and whether he's a tax chet or
he's not worth what he says he is or those issues.

Speaker 1 (18:58):
Hah. That's weird because isn't that exactly what they went
after him on in New York? I mean, wasn't that
the whole, uh, the long and short of it? What's
her name, Letitia James James. Wasn't that her whole That
was the basis of her whole of her whole case
against Trump? Is that he that he quote unquote lied

(19:22):
about what he was worth to get to get mortgages
or what I mean, that's that was the essence. Well,
that's her, That's what I had him. Yeah, right, you're right.
These people don't work as a team. They don't. They're
not all in it together trying to take out Trump.
I gotcha. Okay.

Speaker 7 (19:41):
What we're interested in is does the president have business
dealings with Russia such that it compromises the United States and.

Speaker 1 (19:49):
And the answer to that is apparently U No, because
has there any ever been any evidence brought forward that
has led to any thing whatsoever. No, it's the wapouts
regard to Trump. Thank you, ye, thank you. Call back
to Nancy Pelosi in the wipeout smear. There's a wipeout,

(20:11):
a wrap up, wrap up smear, wrap up smear, wrap
up smear. Where you put shit out there in the press,
you get the press to quote it, uh, and then
you would she say monetize it or she had some
really she had some cool wordage verbiage for it, and
it made sense you, Uh, what was you merchandise it?

(20:33):
That was it? You merchandise it? Yes, I means put
it on T shirts and hats and stuff. And then
once the press gets ahold of it, and then you
take the press and you go see, see we told
you even though the press got their information from you
to begin with. So it's that whole circular logic thing.
But now we find out and again no one is surprised,

(20:55):
and it turns out that it was Dingle nuts Adam
Schiff who o k the leaking of the classified information
to try to take out Trump, which didn't did it? Nope?
And what will happen to Well, he said he has
a pardon, So what's going to happen to shift if

(21:19):
and what all? Right? Going forward? What do we do
with this information now that we have it.

Speaker 5 (21:25):
I don't well, I don't think anything will happen to
him from that information.

Speaker 1 (21:29):
Now they're going after him a different way. But well
for the the mortgage stuff, right right? The did that
follow he get?

Speaker 5 (21:38):
Did he get a pardon for any and all crimes
committed between twenty fourteen?

Speaker 1 (21:43):
And then that's a.

Speaker 5 (21:46):
I don't remember what his party was questioned. I think
his partner specifically for the j six committee, but I'm
not sure of that because if he did not have
it to him about the mortgage stuff either.

Speaker 1 (22:00):
Uh, Bishop shim According to The Hill, Adam Schiff called
his preemptive pardon from former President Biden, and this is
the story's dated January twentieth of this year, called his
preemptive pardon from Biden announcementary for all past members of

(22:24):
the now defunct House January sixth Committee in the final
moments of his presidency, unnecessary and unwise. He says, I
continue to believe that the grant of pardons to a
committee that undertook such important work to uphold the law
was unnecessary and because of the president, it establishes unwise.
But I certainly understand why President Biden believed he needed

(22:47):
to take this step in light of the persistent and
baseless threats issued by Donald Trump and individuals who are
now some of his law enforcement nominees. He was one
of nine members shift of committee that investigated the capital
attack in January sixth, all of whom were offered preemptive
pardons by Biden in a clemency action dated on the nineteenth.

(23:09):
Biden also pardon the police officers who testified before the
panel and the panel staff. Why would they need again,
what would any of them need? I know the whole thing.
It's it's ridiculous. We see this is the corrupt system
in action. We have evidence of it every day, and
will any That's the part that frustrates each and every

(23:31):
one of us is that even though we know it's true,
they will not, in ninety nine point nine percent of
the cases, ever see any sort of punishment for it. Zero, zilch, nada.
As someone on the radio once said, doctor Magneto, too
late for me. Unfortunately, the federal government has had mind

(23:53):
shit for years as former military trying to keep your Yeah,
they got yours too wrong. Is all your sniffs show?
Do not? My dog? Says Nancy always the Baltimore gangsta.
That's just it. When you look into Pelosi's past, she
was a family. Part of a family you did not
f with because they would f right back and put

(24:16):
you underneath Giant Stadium or whatever the hell? There you
stadium with the Giants? What is that? Where did the
Giants play out?

Speaker 7 (24:28):
And?

Speaker 6 (24:28):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (24:29):
In New Jersey? What the hell's the name of the stadium?
I remember? Uh, it's a bit. Nancy Pelosi is a
great a skank. Missy thirteen said, they all have our
information already, but this is taking another step under the
Patriot Act. You can return it, uh and get a
regular It's not too late to take way back. Hold.
What the hell are they talking about? Joy? Law of state?

(24:51):
Don't get it. Don't get what you guys, ask Weinstein,
Twila Brown? Damn it? What are they talking about? What
is it? I think talking about me behind my back?
Maybe it's about me, isn't it. It's always about me, No, Brad,
it's not always about matter of fact, it's very often
not about you, oh FREEB thirty eight. That was nervous

(25:13):
laughter on Ron's part when Brad mentioned skank weasel.

Speaker 5 (25:20):
I have to admit I've known a few skank weasels
in my time.

Speaker 1 (25:29):
Uh huh, I'm gonna leave that, leave that dangling. Okay,
I am gonna leave that dangling. Maybe you should rub
some body butter on your skank weasel if you haven't. You,
if your skank weasel is dried out and flaky, how
about moisturizing that bad boy. Would body butter help a
skank weasel? I don't know. Potentially, you wouldn't know unless

(25:51):
you tried, right right, I have my my body buttered
feet are all body buttered up right now? They smell
like pechuli or as uh as our little jingle said,
How do what did it call it? Petchole? Pecherino? He
remember how pecoli? That's right, Jeff, Pecoli? Is it?

Speaker 6 (26:16):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (26:18):
Is this right? Here? We go?

Speaker 5 (26:30):
My toes smell like pecoolie, and yours can too.

Speaker 1 (26:36):
Thank you the smell my mojo jingle. My toes. My
toes smell like the coolie, and yours can too. I
should probably give the website it's smell Mymojo dot com.
It's Sugar Creek Goods and it's where you'll find all

(26:58):
the good stuff for you and your skin and your
pets skin and your beard, not beard in terms of
if you're gay, you know a woman to try to
keep you from peering gay, although that person could actually
use some body butter as well and feel better, so
it actually does for both types of beards. Look at

(27:20):
that right, yeah, huh yeah, uh right. They don't have
soap on a row, but they got soap. Ron can
tell you all about that. He uses it in the
showers every day. Yes, I do, and they have it.
See the thing about to Smell my Mojo is it's
all natural, which generally is a kind of a warning
label if you see, at least this has been my

(27:41):
experience in the past. If you see something that says
all natural, that means it doesn't work. But this is
the exception to one of the exceptions to the rule
at Sugar Creek Goods, which again is smellmimojo dot com.
If you want to take good care of your boddy,
it's the only one you got. And in this case,
look at that face right there, which reminds me of

(28:05):
a meme I saw this morning. Don't let me forget
to share it because it made perfect sense to me.
It's about a dog. I'll do that coming up. But
they have dog shampoo, and they've got all natural deal
to it. They've all these all of these wonderful products.
It's a small business. It's good for you. It's good
for the small business. It's good for the people around you.
Because you don't want to stink. Maybe you do. I

(28:26):
guess it's your If you want to stink, that's fine,
just don't do it around us. But go to smell
mymojo dot com. Use the promo code daily Mojo. Save
it ten percent, fifteen percent, I know, fifteen percent. Holy crap,
it's even better than I thought. Isn't that amazing? It's
almost like I planned it that way. So you say

(28:46):
fifteen percent using the promo code daily Mojo, and all
of your friends will be happy. It makes a great gift,
no matter what the occasion. It's all right there. And again,
don't forget to tell them that. Brad and Ron SENSI
mostly Brad, But all right, smell mymojo dot com promo
code daily Mojo, Smell good, Save money, everybody wins. Smell

(29:08):
mymojo dot com. Stupidity is not a competition.

Speaker 3 (29:16):
The whole island will become souls unless you're a politician
overly populated that it will tip of a capside.

Speaker 1 (29:26):
Right, These are the people that are running our country. Well,
at least they have been sent to Washington to try
to represent us as it were. Not my dog says,
did Adam go to the school that Jeffy taught at?
Possibly bugs? Mom. I can't believe with such a scum

(29:50):
hole like a shifty Shift and the only thing they
can get him on is realty fraud. See, that's the thing.
People like Shift are well insulated there, well protected. They're
part of the machine. It's very unlikely that he'll ever
see any any sort of punishment for you know, what

(30:10):
he's done. Very we ever see that you're in.

Speaker 5 (30:13):
Congress or the Senate, you're very unlikely to see any
kind of punishment.

Speaker 1 (30:18):
Unless you're like George Santos, which does make you wonder
what to who who do he pissed off?

Speaker 5 (30:23):
Even then, George Santos didn't see a lot of punishment.
They just removed he's in prison. Well, yeah, but I
don't know that was it?

Speaker 1 (30:30):
It wasn't. It wasn't. Well, he's in prison. I would
say I would call that punishment. Okay, you what you
think he.

Speaker 5 (30:40):
What was it the government that went after him?

Speaker 1 (30:44):
Yes, okay, as it damn lutely. I mean, he's in
prison right now and he uh who was it that
he got on the wrong side of He didn't the line,
apparently didn't tow the line. And so if you if

(31:04):
for whatever reason, if you if you cross the the
red line that whoever your handlers are have drawn on
the ground, in the sand, whatever, that's when you're gonna
That's when you'll take it in one orifice or another
shifty shift. He'll probably much like people like Nancy Pelosi,

(31:26):
She'll have her twin subsease full of whatever ice cream
she wants until the day she assumes room temperature, much
like Diane Feinstein. Einstein, Hell, she was dead and she
was still in government. That's unbelievable.

Speaker 8 (31:41):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (31:41):
Lepp Is over in the Daily Mojo chat room says,
will all those pardons hold up because they were auto penned?
Oh yeah, whatever happened to the autopen scandal.

Speaker 5 (31:50):
They're probably still researching it, but it's not gonna come
up with anything. It's because every every president has used
the autopen. Proving that he that he didn't give the
authorizations is going to be the tough part.

Speaker 1 (32:04):
Yeah, it's. I mean, we again, we all know that
what happened was beyond shifty, be way beyond shifty. But
will they will they do anything? Yeah? All right, So
this is I've been I've had this up here for
a while and it's a visual thing. So if you're
listening to the podcast, you're going to get to play

(32:26):
along at home when you get home. But this is
really weird. It is a the University of Queensland and
they did it's a it's a sight test. And what
you'll do is you'll you just think you just let

(32:47):
this dude just talking about it, talk about it. Just
do what he said, Do do what he say, Do
what he say.

Speaker 9 (32:54):
Now, we're going to present you with some faces on
the screen. Now we're going to present you with some
faces on the screen and one you to keep your
eyes on the center of the cross in the middle
of the screen, So don't look directly at the faces,
keep your eyes on the cross.

Speaker 1 (33:09):
All right, Okay, yep, yes, are you ready? Yes? Here
they are. Okay, keep staring at the cross and you're
going to start seeing you're looking strictly. I don't know
if it works with the wonkiness or not. Oh, it works.

Speaker 9 (33:25):
By this point in the video, the faces should look
a little bit strange, right, So they might look a
little bit alien like. Some of the eyes might be
a little larger than you'd expect, and they might look
a little bit paler. But if you replay this section
of the video and look at the faces again, you'll
see that they're completely normal. We're not playing any tricks
on you. There's no photoshopping going on. What's happening is

(33:49):
that the previous face is distorting the face that follows it.
For example, if one of the faces has small, beady
little eyes and it's followed by a face with regular
sized eyes, then these regular sized eyes look huge again.
You can't help but to see these faces is distorted.
That's kind of the nature of the illusion. There's nothing

(34:12):
that you can do about it. You're not even aware
that your visual system is doing any sort of comparison.

Speaker 1 (34:17):
Isn't that freaky? You saw it? Yeah?

Speaker 5 (34:19):
Oh yeah, I kept I kept looking at the faces
to make sure that they were correct faces right, and
then looking back at this at the uh, it's little hat.

Speaker 1 (34:28):
It's so weird.

Speaker 5 (34:29):
And then after about two faces they all started walking
out again.

Speaker 1 (34:33):
That was crazy. Yep, yeah, it's isn't it weird what
your brain does when and and that's just because of
I guess, your peripheral vision. You know.

Speaker 5 (34:42):
The other thing I learned probably about two months ago,
is that there is a blind spot somewhere in your vision, Yes,
that your brain fills in for you.

Speaker 1 (34:52):
Yep. That's what most of and the what we what
we see as motion as just an illusion because your
brain sees in and basically still images and it makes
up all the transitional because it really I mean things
that we take for granted on a daily basis, the

(35:14):
way our brains work, the way our you know, every
every part of our body really the way that it works,
but especially when it comes to vision, it's truly amazing.

Speaker 5 (35:24):
Does that kind of stuff explain why people see UFOs
or bigfoot?

Speaker 1 (35:31):
What it does, I think explain is why people see ghosts, yeah,
or see things that you know it was there and
then it wasn't because you see something literally out of
the corner of your eye and you look over and that's.

Speaker 5 (35:48):
The epitome of Oz playing tricks on you. Right, it's
actually rain playing tricks.

Speaker 1 (35:56):
Yeah and uh and especially if you are an the
influence of oh, I don't know, adult beverages. Let's say this.
Hang up before you take it the This is one
of those things I saw this morning. It was just
one of those things I went, man, that is Yeah,

(36:18):
it's deep with it's it's deep and it'll get you
in the fields. And it's just one of those things
that every now and then as a human being, you
need to stop. You slow down, you smell the roses
and remember what's important. And here it is. It's again
for those of you listening, it is a meme of

(36:40):
a presumably a dead guy with a dog laying on
top of his chest. There and the little thought bubble says,
if I die before my dog, let him see my body.
Dogs understand death, and I don't want him to think
I abandoned him. Oh I know, right, Why is that

(37:02):
a little shit like that'll get to you at our age?

Speaker 5 (37:04):
Dude, A bunch of little shit like that gets too.
I will tear up the craziest shit.

Speaker 1 (37:11):
Sick at these seven firebirden perfect condition.

Speaker 5 (37:15):
I tear up when I'm watching some men do when
I'm watching, like on Instagram or TikTok the soldiers coming home,
surprised family.

Speaker 1 (37:23):
Those piss me off though now because I think nine
of those are set up. I'm sure they are, but
they still get me, which irritates the crap out of me.
Mincy thirteen says, oh so true. So and that's how
Missy thirteen sounds. Oh that's so true. Let me just
tell you, I'm pretty sure at Missy thirteen starred in
my cousin Vinny. It's positive. It's positive traction. I'm telling

(37:47):
you right there. Uh, Florida man in Alabama, don't worry Brad.
Doc Kitty watching Jay. I was waiting for somebody to
say this, Doc Kitty will just eat your face. That
is exactly right. A cat. A cat will go, uh,
he's dead, I'm hungry. I'm gonna eat his face and
that's what they do. But at least they acknowledge that

(38:08):
you're dead first, right right, Deuce five, These damned Asians
hashtag what I learned today, and by the way, that
is what the hashtag you need to use if you
want to get in touch with it or get touched
by us reach out. We would indeed do the touching.
Thank you. Uh, Tiger's real Brad Stags, Real Ron Phillips.

(38:31):
He says it's deep and it'll get you in the fields.
And then of course he rang, because you see, you
can make that into an innuindow you people, damn it
with beaver. I'm so glad. I rarely cry.

Speaker 5 (38:48):
Wait a minute, sometimes a good cry so glad?

Speaker 1 (38:51):
What does that mean? HODI? You wait a minute? What
is that what she's saying here? I'm so glad. I
rarely cry or I'm so glad. I rarely cry. Let's
eat grandma? Yeah? H have you eating Grandma's? And a
comma in there somewhere? Are you? Are you? Uh see? Uh?

(39:18):
Do you think Lapp has hair on the palms of
his hands? Uh, that's a good question. Actually he has glasses,
so we already know that's happened. Stinky Biscuit don't want
to think about real Ron Phillips leaving his skank weaseled angling.
Thank you. See what I have to on a daily basis,
You see what I have to deal with just saying oh,

(39:39):
before I forget this one, My tooasmell like the Collie
and yours can too. When you go to sleep, Joe
Dot come thank you. If you haven't downloaded the Daily
Mojo app yet, please do so. It's cool right to

(40:04):
is smelling, and yours can too. Uh. Get the Daily
Mojo app, put it on your phone. Enable notifications a
couple of reasons. Number one, we can send you messages
and things like that when it is appropriate and you
deb Trev. We brought up a question. She said, can
you can you send pictures in the app? I don't know.

Speaker 5 (40:25):
Uh No, you can post a photo in the app,
but you can't send a photo to somebody else in
a message app in the message I don't know. The
message platform doesn't allow image uploads.

Speaker 1 (40:35):
I guess yeah, but you can post photos. We gave
you that a billity all right, right, yeah, But the
question was why couldn't you know? She well, I can't
we send it? And I don't know. I didn't know the
answer to that, so I thought I would ask the
guru of the app, who is Ron Phillips, who is
who I'm told is working steadfastly on making the damn

(40:58):
thing work for androids? All right?

Speaker 5 (41:00):
The permissioning issue, yes, we've got the that's the problem, right,
We've still got We've still got the ball rolling down
that hill.

Speaker 1 (41:09):
Yes right, yes, okay, yeah. One of the reasons you
want that app is because you'll be able to get there,
you go, You'll be able to get in on the
action of with the the Roswell poster. Move it to
your left. I switched to the other camera. There you go.
Can you see me now? Yeah, it's almost like a graphic.

(41:32):
You didn't see my arm? Uh. The this is one
of I'm gonna guess less than one hundred of these
were actually produced, and so it'll be uh and this
is only part of it. This is only part of
I'm giving you a behind the scenes look at what
just a piece of this mounted poster will be like.

(41:54):
It has many more aspects of it. We're going to
auction this off again. It will also include this the
an image of the Roswell Rock. Familiar with the Roswell Rock.

Speaker 5 (42:07):
No, I'm not, but that looked like a crop circle.

Speaker 1 (42:10):
Well I guess it kind of does look at a
crop circle, isn't it. But there was the rock found
in Roswell with this symbol on it, which will also
be incorporated into the poster here and as you know,
we spent some time in Roswell. We're big fans of
the whole Roswell incident here at the Daily Mojo because
that was kind of the beginning of the modern era,

(42:33):
if you will, of the government cover up it would
really that's where and the it's where we learned that
the government will treat you like absolutely crap and it'll
take good, good people and run them through the ringer,
which is what they did to the people of Roswell,

(42:55):
New Mexico, when the alien craft crashed or whatever they
hell it was. I don't know what it was. Well
I'm certain that it wasn't a weather balloon, I can
tell you that. And we since then have found out
how much they lied, how much they bent the people
of Roswell, New Mexico, over good patriotic people in Roswell,

(43:18):
and they really it was. It's horrible what they did
with the government and the military leadership did to the
people of Roswell following the nineteen forty seven crash of
that craft. So we'll have that up for auction, and
I think it's going to be a that's going to
be a big eie and oh, speaking of Big East,

(43:42):
Doctor Magneto says, sent to us twenty bucks over on
the rumble. Just a tip, that's all we really need.
Doing a great job, guys. Thanks Dad. Will we ever
see David G again? Or is he on a secret
squirrel from which he won't return? Well? I do I

(44:06):
let the cat real out of the bag. I don't.
I don't want to give it the fecal touch. And
I'm always concerned that that's what's gonna happen if I
I mean, we could, if if all things go according
to plan, we could in fact see David G on

(44:28):
this very program tomorrow. Tell what I am I saying?
All right? Now, here is Phil Bell.

Speaker 6 (44:36):
This is Phil Bell on the Daily Mojo. Say uh
break good times. Come on, man, I am so happy
to see that President Trump is getting tough on crime
in Washington, d C. Now you know that I'm the
DC correspondent for the Daily Mojo and I worked in

(44:57):
DC for many years, and a lot of the things
that I've seen were absolutely over the top. Right outside
of the old Freedom Work's office, there was a massive
gathering of homeless people who just took up residents, one
of whom had a very very large giraffe and another
of whom had a popcorn machine. Now, I love large
stuffed giraffes. I love popcorn machines, but they should absolutely

(45:20):
not be on our streets with people who are mentally
unstable and otherwise. Another time, while walking home from work,
I saw a woman going to the bathroom right there
on the street in the middle of downtown DC. Again,
this should not be happening in any major city, much
less our capital city. And oh, by the way, the
disparity between the crime statistics that are being put out

(45:44):
by the left who somehow don't like the idea of
making their cities safe and everybody else who says, you
know what, there really is a crime problem in DC
is truly astounding. President Trump is taking the right step,
and I'm glad to see this and what we should
be seeing rather than fighting it and being angry about it,
is a push in every major city to see this

(46:07):
crime and homelessness go away. Our cities should be show
pieces number one and number two engines of commerce as
opposed to places where bad things happen and people run
around being afraid. Let's hope that eventually the mayors in
these other cities, wake the heck up and do the
right thing so that we can continue to make America

(46:30):
great again. Now let us know in the comments what
you think. And also I hope you'll 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, DC, and you'll know how to
share it with others. Stay sharp, stay strong, and stay
free right here on the Daily Mojo.

Speaker 3 (46:51):
Phil Bell's Morning Update is only on the Daily Mojo.

Speaker 1 (47:00):
The Daily.

Speaker 6 (47:02):
Making like.

Speaker 1 (47:06):
They keep it, funding news last, and the news that
feels So.

Speaker 3 (47:18):
We'd like to say hi to any government agency monitoring
this broadcast.

Speaker 1 (47:23):
You don't want to find it.

Speaker 3 (47:26):
The Dailymojo dot com.

Speaker 1 (47:34):
It was on this day in nineteen eighty six. But
the uh following words were spoken. Let's see if you
can guess exactly who said the following.

Speaker 4 (47:52):
I think you all know that I've always felt the
nine most terrifying words in the English language are I'm
from the government and I'm here to help.

Speaker 1 (48:02):
Hm. Who was that? Who? Anybody? Anybody? Bueller? Distinctive voice,
very distinctive voice. All right, go ahead and put him up.
Put him up? On the screen. We'll play it again.

Speaker 4 (48:13):
I think you all know that I've always felt the
nine most terrifying words in the English language are I'm
from the government and I'm here to help.

Speaker 1 (48:23):
It was during a press conference that Ranaldus Magnus spoke
those words back in the eighties. Yeah. I never thought
I well, I guess we all knew eventually that we
get to a point where you'd play a clip like
that from Ronald Reagan and who is that? Who is that?
I know that voice, I know that voice. But there

(48:46):
are some out there going, yeah, I don't know who
is that?

Speaker 5 (48:48):
There are some things that we're not alive. When he
was president, believe it or not?

Speaker 1 (48:53):
Right right? Crazy? Uh, yep, Ranaldus Magnus, Ronnie Reagun says, now,
my dog, I liked him, Missy thirteen. The thing about
Reagan is they treated him, uh poorly in the press. Yeah,
they they, but they weren't as mean as they are now.

(49:16):
It was on Saturday Morning Live that, uh, Jeffy and
I were discussing the state and we've we've talked about
it here before on this program. The fact that when
you see Seth Myers or Jimmy foul fallon maybe not

(49:36):
so much.

Speaker 5 (49:39):
I saw fallon people like Seth mug Guttfeld on the
other knee.

Speaker 1 (49:44):
Yeah, they did a they did a like a crossover thing.

Speaker 5 (49:53):
But you talk about Jimmy Kimmel and uh, Stephen Colbert Man,
they're they're just hate just.

Speaker 1 (50:01):
Me and that's what it is, and it's it's it's
you know, Colbert gets canceled and you all these people crying.
Did they actually did they watch Colbert? Did they think
he was funny? Because there was just nothing about his
show that I thought was fine. I tried to watch
and I saw the clips that I ever stay up late,

(50:21):
and no, I didn't do that. But in watching be course,
I never thought he was funny when he started off
on Letterman, right, I mean like a correspondent on Letterman show, Colbert,
I don't remember. Yeah, yeah, I think that's how he
got he got things rolling, but it just didn't come
off as funny. And Seth Meyers same way I do,

(50:45):
and Seth Myers could be funny. When he was on
Saturday Night Live. I remember being surprised that they gave
Seth Myers this show because it was like okay.

Speaker 10 (50:54):
But fortunately for him back in the United States after
a trip to Scotland that was supposed to be a
personal business trip and golf vacation but ended up being
mostly about how he never had, in his words, the
privilege of going to Jeffrey Epstein's private island. For more
of this, it's time for a closer look.

Speaker 1 (51:11):
And the one I think we watched on Saturday was
about the first six.

Speaker 10 (51:15):
Months of Trump's presidency have not been great. He spent
most of that time dismantling government services, slashing medicaid.

Speaker 1 (51:21):
It was about the ballroom, because Trump is building the
ballroom in the East. Yeah, I think they're tearing down
the East Wing, and uh, you know they're gonna put it,
and and and Myers goes off on how that's that's
not a presidential thing to do, et cetera, et cetera.
But I and this one's probably along those same the
same vein.

Speaker 10 (51:39):
And cutting taxes for the rich, snatching people off the streets,
imposing arbitrary tariffs on American consumers, and enriching himself financially,
and tripping up the stairs like he's wearing roller blades
on thenoleum. And yeah, I know that trip wasn't as
bad as the time Biden tripped up the stairs. But
you know what bothered Trump way more than it bothered Biden.
When someone showed that clip to Trump, he probably threw

(52:00):
a stapler in his head. But you know, Biden was
always showing it to people on his phone.

Speaker 1 (52:04):
He's like, yeah, oh, no, joke, I almost say that.

Speaker 10 (52:06):
Yeah, yeah, Look you look at me as I had
never walked before anyway, all right, you think that's true.

Speaker 1 (52:15):
It's a joke.

Speaker 8 (52:16):
Again.

Speaker 5 (52:16):
It surprised me for it to be true about by
going oh yeah, yeah, yeah, uh no, I don't think.

Speaker 1 (52:23):
I don't. I don't know. I don't I get the
feeling behind closed doors and when we've heard stories about
it before, I've never been behind close doors.

Speaker 5 (52:34):
Can't we just put a chair one of those chairlifts.
Let's put a chair lift on the freaking thing.

Speaker 1 (52:40):
Which see, that's funnier than what he said than what
seth myers. I don't I've not seen that clip of
Trump tripping before. That's got to be a giant pain
in the ass walking up the stairs, knowing if I trip,
it's going to be a worldwide news. But uh, Trump

(53:01):
has slipped a couple of times Biden made a habit
of it. I mean it was it got to be
where it was you'd see him approaching any like a
little step down or something people because they were Yeah,
that's what I'm saying. He tripped a lot. And I

(53:24):
don't think that behind closed doors he was like lighthearted
and jovial about it. We again seeing stories where he
yelled at people and he was kind of a dick
behind and I think that was that's the real as
a real Joe Biden behind the scenes. I've heard stories
that Trump is not. I think he can be stern

(53:47):
to work where with and work for and probably you know,
demands hard work. But I don't think he is a
an a hole behind the scenes, at least that's from
from stores I've told that's it's he's not. But who
knows but Seth Meyers. Going back to the the cancelation
of Colbert and and all of these late night shows

(54:10):
when Reagan was president, they would Johnny Carson would do
jokes and they were funny, but they and they weren't mean.
This stuff comes from a place of just hatred. When
they talk about Trump, they just freaking hate him. And
why is it that they hate him. I mean, why
does Seth Meyers hate Trump? I don't know if he

(54:34):
has personal experience with him or what it is. Does
does he hate him just because it's the cool thing
to do. He talked about you know, well he wants
to catch people off the streets. Well, and that's just it.
The networks, the corporations have vieused these shows as a
way to influence voters. That's it, that's exactly. They are

(54:55):
political tools and they they're not entertainment, and they get
told what they're going to what they're gonna say, and
can't say yeah. I mean, look, Bill Maher, Michelle Mars
probably not part of the machine. Bill Marr will go
both directions, believe it or not. He'll go both directions.
But he's not mean with it. I've just seen him

(55:18):
be kind of pointed.

Speaker 5 (55:19):
But I've seen him turn also, I've seen him turn
a different face.

Speaker 1 (55:24):
I mean, but Bill, Bill Maher looks like he could
be a dick. He can't.

Speaker 5 (55:28):
He probably can be, and he probably has been in
the past.

Speaker 1 (55:33):
Yeah, but but yeah, he will.

Speaker 5 (55:35):
Take a look at something and go, yeah, you people
are stupid. That's just that's a that's a different kind
of but Bill Maher's not what I would call mainstream.

Speaker 1 (55:46):
Media talk show. No, he's not people of three big ones. Yeah.
It drove his people insane by his people and his
audience when he went to meet with Trump.

Speaker 5 (55:59):
And yeah, and you know what Rock it was Kid
Rock to put it together.

Speaker 1 (56:04):
Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (56:05):
I don't have a problem with talk show hosts who
play both sides of the fence.

Speaker 1 (56:12):
I can.

Speaker 5 (56:12):
I can get with that because there are issues on
both sides. Jimmy Fallon is one of them. Jimmy Fallon
will play both sides of the fence, not that he
seems like it, not that he's like top of the
lion kind of guy either, but he'll play both sides
of the fence. Jimmy Kimmel will not play both sides
of the fence.

Speaker 1 (56:34):
He is a liberal.

Speaker 5 (56:34):
He is a liberal through and through. Biden can't do
roll the map is a piece of shit. Yeah, Cobert
was the same one Fallon.

Speaker 1 (56:47):
What was the story? Remember what came out that he
was kind of a nightmare to work for.

Speaker 5 (56:53):
I do don't know very much about it.

Speaker 1 (56:56):
Rolling stone Head. It was twenty three, twenty two years ago.
September two, twenty three. Inside Jimmy Fallons. Tonight's Show employees
described to being afraid of Fallon's outbursts and unexpected, inconsistent behavior.
Many of these staffers are liberals and didn't want him
talking about good things Trump does, witt and charm, creativity

(57:20):
fold this player bad. There were bad Jimmy days and
good Jimmy days. They say. Fallon seemed to be confused
during rehearsal in twenty seventeen when he crossed out jokes
on a piece of papers, holding rift to the audience
for a bit, then quizzically looked back down the same
sheet of paper. He couldn't remember he had crossed it
out himself. The employee says, I was like, oh my god,
he seems drunk. He doesn't know what he's doing. This

(57:42):
could be awful, could be Angel Show right here, really,
they say. Fourteen former employees says the Tonight Show have
been a toxic workplace for years, far outside the boundaries
of what's considered normal in the high pressure world of
late night TV. That story kind of went away.

Speaker 5 (57:57):
I mean, look, as much as you'd like to say
that these guys control their shows, they don't.

Speaker 1 (58:02):
They don't.

Speaker 5 (58:03):
But Jimmy Fallon, like I said he'll play both sides
of the political aisle because there's you know on sides. Yes,
you know who did control his show? Johnny Carson.

Speaker 1 (58:18):
Yeah, he did, because he owned the show. He bought
the show.

Speaker 5 (58:22):
I was watching the thing the other day about people
that crossed him on the Live show and he just
he just.

Speaker 1 (58:28):
Banned them for life.

Speaker 5 (58:30):
It was just who was it? Frank Sinatra? He banned
he was only on there once, and banned him for
life after that show because Frank Sinatra was a diva,
tried to dictate what Johnny could and couldn't say, and
Johnny was like, no, that's not gonna work. That's not
the way it works on my show.

Speaker 1 (58:47):
Faith me yep, right, well, and it was his show
and so he had the right to do it. I
I in watching the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson.

Speaker 5 (58:58):
It was was entertaining on YouTube the last couple of
weeks watching some of his episodes.

Speaker 1 (59:05):
Have you traded in your TikTok obsession? YouTube?

Speaker 4 (59:09):
No?

Speaker 5 (59:09):
But I don't do TikTok very much anymore. I just
it got to a point where everyone every other things
said was an ad.

Speaker 1 (59:17):
I don't do TikTok that much.

Speaker 5 (59:20):
I do it still but once in a while.

Speaker 1 (59:23):
You haven't given it up yet. No, you haven't walked
away from the TikTok.

Speaker 9 (59:27):
No.

Speaker 5 (59:27):
I find myself more on Instagram, in Facebook reels now.
I don't know why, but anyhow, Yeah, I mean, TikTok
has become nothing but adds.

Speaker 1 (59:37):
So it was bad. It's a Chinese. Whatever happened to
the child? I thought they had to sell TikTok? I
thought we were what's the deal? Are we still in?
What happened to that one?

Speaker 5 (59:46):
I think we're in a delayed action.

Speaker 1 (59:48):
It's just things keep I don't know what the what
the what? The controversy of the week is lately? Uh?
This I every You got to get the good news
where you can get it. Score one for the bull.
This was in uh uh, hang on a second, it's

(01:00:09):
in Espanole. I have to translate it.

Speaker 4 (01:00:12):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:00:12):
This was in Fanducion Magdalena. And who doesn't love Fanducion
Magdalena this time of year, it is incredible and the
smell of bull is in the air. Here is man
versus bull. Score one for the bull. Oh whoops, whoops? Yeah,

(01:00:41):
see he was uh he was supposed to jump over
the bull bull had other players and uh, he didn't.
He didn't quite make it. If he had gone over
what if he had got over the bull, things would
have been okay, uh uh he uh, let's see the

(01:01:02):
what was that? There's a a name for this celebration.
And no, it's not the March of the Dumbasses. Uh,
I don't care. It's it's just it was an event.
It was people versus bulls where they come out and
this has been a thing, uh, you know in South
America for a while, you know, bullfights and all that,

(01:01:23):
and as long as you give the bulls a fighting chance,
I'm fine. But most of the time it's you know,
rigged in favor of the bullfighter, uh, the matador. But
this guy was supposed to jump over the bull. Didn't.
The bull got him and uh, although he did get up,
and he did get up and walk away fortunately well

(01:01:46):
for a short time. Oh okay. He later assumed room
temperature because of his injuries, because oh yeah, it's yeah, you.

Speaker 5 (01:01:55):
Well right here, the bull just takes it, just go
shit right there.

Speaker 1 (01:01:59):
Yeah yeah. I don't know if it got him that
low that it got the actual shit out of him,
but it did poop it did. It pierced him, and
the bull's just like what what? What the dude was?
What what I do?

Speaker 9 (01:02:15):
Bull?

Speaker 1 (01:02:16):
Didn't do anything wrong? Bull do? But bulls do when
you run at them and try to jump over them
and don't quite have the lift that you thought you had.
But Columbia last year passed the no moss Ole law
and that bands bullfights throughout the country, so there will
be no more bullfighting in Colombia from this point on.

(01:02:39):
But again for this one, I'm I'm along the side
of the bull because if you're kind of like when
the when the people I don't even know what they are,
if there's a name for them, but when they wrestle
alligators or whatever and they go up and they open
the alligator's mouth and they stick their head in there,
and it's like, oh, look at that's so cool. He's
got his head in the other I'm like, I'd pay

(01:03:01):
good money just to watch that alligator chomp down. Right now.
If you're gonna do stupid crap like that, I mean,
you gotta you gotta accept the consequences if you lose.
I mean, you shouldn't punish Where did she go?

Speaker 4 (01:03:20):
There is?

Speaker 1 (01:03:21):
You shouldn't punish the animal if you are going to
do stupid things in their mouth. I could have worded
that differently. Oh and there there's no there really, there's
no medical cure for that kind of stupidity. I was
listening yesterday to was it a party? Was it too

(01:03:47):
in the family? Was I listening to? And a an
ad came on Go figure for Vaccines and it was
what was the app? Gosh because I wanted to go
and check it out, and it was brought to you
by Pfizer, and it talked about how you know the vaccine,

(01:04:08):
they can help you with your immune system, and they
do this and they do that, and I thought, well,
that's a bunch of crap. And I'm not an anti vaxxer,
but we all learned over the past five years that
it's going to be a shocker for some people. But
the government really doesn't They're not interested in your well being.

(01:04:30):
It's crazy. I know they're interested in your compliance and
your ability to send them money on a regular basis,
but beyond that, they really just don't give a crap
about you. So you're gonna have to take your health
into your own hands, which is where Stella's mojo comes
in and doctor Stella Emmanuel, who's been on the program.
She she's an amazing doctor. First of all, she fought

(01:04:55):
the system, beat the system, Reilly, because they tried to
in her. They tried to hang in albatross around her
neck in the form of well she prescribes more ivermectin
than any other doctor in the country. Yeah, she did.
And if you need ivermectin, guess what you want to

(01:05:16):
go to stellasmojo dot com. He's after a short, a
short little telehealth I guess whatever they call it, teledoc thing.
If there was anything good that came out of the pandemic,
that's one thing that's the whole telehealth thing. Because you
don't have to get up, get dress, go to the
doctor's office. I'll at your living room with a nice

(01:05:39):
shirt on. You don't have to wear pants. But you
talk to the folks over at Stella's mojo and if
you need the ivermectin or the hydroxychloroquin, which actually do
have some beneficial properties, you can get them there. You
got And sadly, a lot of peopleeople lost their own

(01:06:01):
doctor during the course of the whole scandemic. Because it
turns out that they're I don't their doctor was woke
or just listen to the wrong people, because that happened
to and it was sad because a lot of doctors
are like what happened to these doctors? Did they get
their brains sucked out through their ears because they said

(01:06:21):
they were doing crazy stuff? They were doing, I mean
they would recommend to and not all of them, but
the ones who didn't go along with the whole narrative
got their reputations ruined or they attempted to ruin them,
like in Stella Emmanuel's case, Peter McCullough's case, what is

(01:06:45):
what's her name, dark hair doctor, America's doctor. Yes, yeah,
some own gold, some own gold boy. They bent her
over big time.

Speaker 5 (01:06:57):
They That's the thing about huge when it was when
it was all happening, And I think I probably mentioned
this at the time, but prior to COVID, doctors were
the all knowing yip from a medical standpoint, and then
COVID came along and all of a sudden, doctors, some of
them didn't know what the they were talking about. What's crazy?

(01:07:19):
I mean, doctors would like high end degrees and capabilities,
and all of a sudden they're dumb. No no, no, according
to the system.

Speaker 1 (01:07:29):
No no, no. It was It was crazy to watch that,
and again it showed you how much power the AMA
had and still has. The AMA can if you're a
doctor man, you don't toe the line, AMA can take
you out worse than the mafia. Actually, I think I
prefer the mafia because at least you know what you're
dealing with and they have some honor. I'm not sure

(01:07:53):
the AMA really has honor as it is truly defined.
But you want to If you want to need things
like the ivermactin hydroxychlork in the bottom line is this,
you go to stellarsmojo dot com. You find it there,
you get it taken care of. You're good. But I
need to find that ad that I was listening to.

(01:08:13):
It started this whole thing off because it was I mean,
it was just it was a couple of blatant untruths
we're spoken in this thing, and I thought, well, that's interesting.
But you know, it was a Pfizer ad. And as
much as I was thinking about doing the UH shingles vaccination,

(01:08:38):
are you gonna do it? No? No, sucks, doesn't it?
I mean, because I do not want to get shingles.
I don't know anybody does. But I don't trust and
probably never will, probably will not for the for the
rest of my life, probably will not trust the establishment.

(01:09:03):
I'm not sure exactly what could happen that would make
me turn that around? What could they do if could
they win your trust back? Ron, It'd be hard pressed
to do so kind to think of what could they
do that would make me I'm not sure there is anything,

(01:09:24):
isn't That's sad. You can't trust the institute. You can't
trust the medical institution. You can't trust anything. Trust me.
I mean, look at this face, but I'll lie to you.
How much money we're talking? How much money? Uh? It's
a Stellusmojo dot com is a website. Stellusmojo dot com

(01:09:46):
Daily Mojo promo code save. Was it five percent? Five
percent better than a swift kick in the cajones? Isn't it?
Unless you're into that sort of thing, in which case
it's not. But for the most of us who are
not sick and twisted in defeat, use the promo code
daily Mojo at stellarsmojo dot com. You're listening to the

(01:10:11):
lunatic fringe of American radio, The Daily Mojo. I love
this headline at the New York Post. Trump rips disgusting,
degenerate Pelosi allege's average minded husband Paul got rich off

(01:10:34):
of the insight information. Yeah, of course they did. It's
amazing how the government would be working on something and
Nancy Pelosi suddenly was able again using her prior connections
as a connected mafiosa family or whatever they were connected with.

(01:11:00):
But from what I've read, man, you did not want
to cross the what's her maiden name? It was Nancy
Pelosi maiden name. That's such a quaint term, isn't it.
The Alisandra Dallesandro, the Alessandro. He didn't want to cross

(01:11:24):
the salad day. He didn't want to cross them because
they would. And Mike still, take you how old is
she now? One hundred and twelve? Yeah, she's uh. Actually,
it's a really good picture of her. Well, if there
is such a thing, take a look at this. There's

(01:11:46):
Mike as I get it over there, hang on, I say,
it takes a while that I found a smaller one
that's not a bad picture. And you know what the
secret to that is? Paint photoshop. Yeah, that probably helped.
But lighting, you take the light from a lower angle,

(01:12:08):
you shine it up so you don't get the shadows
because you know there's not a shadow underneath her nose,
which is typical of a portrait. You'll get that triangular shadow.
You got your three point lighting going on, but uh, nope,
get that thing lit down and up and off to
the side, kind of tell it's over. He lights off
to the to our left and a shining just a

(01:12:31):
little bit of a shadow right there. But that didn't
highlight those wrinkles. She got a few of them, just
a few on this day in nineteen eighty one. Did
you when was the first time you bought a computer? Oh?

Speaker 5 (01:12:49):
The first computer I had was nineteen eighty three.

Speaker 1 (01:12:55):
Was it an IBM?

Speaker 6 (01:12:57):
No?

Speaker 1 (01:12:57):
It was an Apple, an Apple two plus. You remember
how much it was?

Speaker 5 (01:13:04):
No, it was my dad's computer, but I used it.
I don't remember how much it was. He got it
the first IBM, the very first one, I thought, was
in nineteen eighty five or eighty six, and that was
an Apple two c plus and it was like forty
five hundred dollars.

Speaker 8 (01:13:22):
Show.

Speaker 5 (01:13:22):
Yeah, man, I just the liquor stored you Rod, I
didn't I signed up for a credit card.

Speaker 1 (01:13:31):
The American way. Yeah. IBM's first personal computer, the first PC.
It was one thousand, five hundred and sixty five dollars.
What would that be today? Nineteen eighty one? One dozen?
Would I say? One thousand, five hundred and eighty one, yeah,

(01:13:53):
eighty one that was the year. Sixty five dollars MM
into days money? How much you think that would be
thirty five hundred today? That fifteen hundred and sixty five
dollars in nineteen eighty one would be fifty five hundred

(01:14:14):
and thirty four dollars and fifty seven cents today. Wow,
I'd be a lot today to plunk down for a computer.

Speaker 5 (01:14:22):
It would be that'd be a hygat pretty high end computer.

Speaker 1 (01:14:24):
Yeah, no kidding, that would be I'd be expensive, is
what that would be. And how much? I wonder how
much RAM was in that?

Speaker 5 (01:14:36):
Uh first probably five hundred and twelve K.

Speaker 1 (01:14:41):
Or two hundred fifty K. Let's see here, Uh the
it's it had an the Intel eighty eighty eight processor
was running at four point seven seven megahurtz. My dad
had an eighty howmuch ram? Oh said? How much do
you think of day sixteen K of RAM. Oh wow,

(01:15:04):
expandable to two fifty six on the motherboard and uh,
in total it could be six hundred and forty kilobytes
of RAM. What's the average RAM or good RAM today? What?

Speaker 5 (01:15:15):
Thirty two sixty four, one hundred and twenty eight? I
mean megabytes?

Speaker 1 (01:15:19):
Right? Yeah, gigabytes? Gigabytes?

Speaker 5 (01:15:21):
Yeah, yeah, just can you imagine this forty KB of RAM? Well,
we weren't at that time, we weren't doing you know,
super super duper graphics either. Hell, my dad's eighty eighty
eight didn't do graphics at all.

Speaker 1 (01:15:41):
Oh didn't You couldn't see pictures or anything.

Speaker 5 (01:15:42):
No, it was ASKI like we talked about yesterday. It
was asky photos, ASCI pictures where they took the text
and made the you know, the the image out of
the text.

Speaker 1 (01:15:53):
I don't, I don't.

Speaker 5 (01:15:53):
I'm not sure I ever even saw an image or
a photo on that machine. This is as an ASKI. Yeah, yeah,
that is. But that's that's a dot matrix print out.

Speaker 4 (01:16:10):
Umm.

Speaker 5 (01:16:11):
Here yeah that's yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:16:14):
Here is an ASCI. It's made it's made out of characters. Yeah,
if you squint, it's one of those things where if
you spin it looks better. And it's ironic that it's
a zebra. At least I think it's a zebra, because
this was also the day in nineteen eighty three that

(01:16:36):
the quaga you familiar with, the quaga. No, never had
a quaga. No, never seen a quaga. Very sad, very
sad story. Nineteen eighty the last quaga died in the
Amsterdam Zoo. It was a species of zebra that was
different because its stripes were confined to its head. Oh

(01:16:59):
and then we're after the Dutch settlement of south Sea
vie Arica began, Quaga were heavily hunted for their meat
and skins. Apparently quaga meat was good, uh, and their
skins were Let's see, I had a picture over here
with a quaga. Nope, that is not for those who
keep in drag. That is not a quagga. Uh, there's

(01:17:21):
a quaga. There's a quaga. Interesting looking animal. Isn't it
to that they don't exist anymore? Sad?

Speaker 5 (01:17:31):
This is the kind of asky stuff I used to
do on my bulletin board. And that's that's that's what
a chat rooms? Yeah, just early chat rooms. But that's
what the hell is that I mean it's just it's
just a it's an it's a design created using characters
on your keyboard. So it wasn't a photo. But you

(01:17:53):
know people got creative with it, no doubt.

Speaker 1 (01:17:56):
Wait a second, those are words. They are what's it?
Don't know?

Speaker 5 (01:18:02):
Missile something, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:18:06):
I think that first word is kissing. Okay, kissing. It's
probably some language I don't know, German maybe because the
language says German right below it there. Kissing isn't German?
Kissing is kissing? Hold on a second. Wait, then we've
got to figure it in. Don't don't start the mystery.

(01:18:27):
And then a secret kissing I'm pretty sure that's German?
Is it looks like it wi scoff hoof. It says
kissing something. What have you been kissing? It's something in there.

(01:18:48):
It's a secret, the secret thing you've been Now we know.
Now we know there's something's going on there. Did you
just let a cat out of the bag? I think
you may have. And I said, open tab. There there's
there's another one. Let me get over here there.

Speaker 5 (01:19:08):
I mean you can make you could make stupid little.

Speaker 1 (01:19:11):
Computy ask a keyboard, right, But yeah, that last thing
looked a lot like it's it's it was a hidden
message in there. I'm sure there was. It said kissing something. Uh,
there was some kissing going on in It wasn't in
the interview actually, But Candice Owens was on Tucker's show yesterday.

(01:19:35):
You know, I guess it's been a few days ago,
but I just saw a part of it yesterday. But
she was talking about her being sued by mcron and
the the whole Macrone Brigitte McCrone thing is weird because

(01:19:57):
isn't she calling her a former man? Isn't that what
the deal is? Yes, And I'm not sure she's I mean,
it's not It's not really what you would call a
fringe theory. And it turns out that Emmanuel Macrone when
he met with Trump at the White House to talk

(01:20:21):
about the uh, he was that the it was one
of the wars. It was either the Russian Ukraine thing
or Israel in Gaza, can't remember what, but they were
going to France was going to support whatever it was
we were doing. But one of the reported conditions of
them getting involved was that the White House get Candice

(01:20:45):
Owans to stop talking about Mbidget Macrone. How weird is that?
And why would you do that? I mean, it's a
wait a second because after mc on went to the
White House a according to Candice Owen, uh, some of

(01:21:06):
them from the White House called her and it's like, okay,
McCrone wants want you to stop talking about Bridget mccron
because because why why did they? Why are they? And
they've they've sued her. It's a two hundred page lawsuit.
Is it defamation? Which is that? Why?

Speaker 6 (01:21:29):
Uh?

Speaker 4 (01:21:29):
They?

Speaker 1 (01:21:30):
She said that that the the lawsuit is all over
the place that it really is like they're not saying
that what Candie Owens is saying is not true. There
it's it's like a roundabout way and let me see
if this if what she says here clears any of
it series his own viewer. Yeah, second, I think I
have said too uh Nope, Wow, I thought, Wow, she's

(01:21:52):
talking fast. I must have that set on one point five. Nope,
that is normal speed for Candace.

Speaker 8 (01:21:58):
First thought this was just so over the top. But
then he turns Tom Claire and he asks him like
a basic question. He's like, you know, what evidence did
you present to her that brigit's a man and Tom
Claire can't answer the question. He's like, we you know
we there was. You can read the claims. It's it's extensive,
and you know we told her that she was a woman.
They never presented any evidence. We went to them before
we published the series. We were in touch with Tom

(01:22:20):
Claire of Claire and Locke. We sent them a list
of questions. We said, look, we won't even do this
series if you answer these basic circle yes or no questions.
Was Brigitte Macrone the first lady born a woman? I
mean that basic of questions. Did she ever live as
a person named Vera Nique before the transition? Temporarily Brigitte

(01:22:40):
lived as a person named Vernique. They refuse to answer
these yes or no questions. Obviously, if you're going to
prove actual malice, you have to you have to present
to the court, which is it's obviously very high bar
that's been set, which I don't necessarily even agree with
that bar, by the way New York Times versus Sullivan set.

Speaker 1 (01:22:54):
But obviously you have to prove that I acted, I
knew the truth, and I act. That's exactly right.

Speaker 8 (01:23:00):
I was desperate to get to the truth and said
I would stop doing this series We also offered for
me to get on a plane and fly to France
to interview to get Brigitte's side of this. You know,
I want to make sure I'm not colored by having read.

Speaker 1 (01:23:14):
I'm pretty sure she shouldn't use that word I'm colored.

Speaker 8 (01:23:20):
Yeah, yeah, becoming Brigitte and reading the series, there could
be another side and it was essentially a big fu
and said Tom Claire comes back. She doesn't have to
answer your question.

Speaker 1 (01:23:34):
That doesn't have to prove to you.

Speaker 11 (01:23:36):
They retain Tom Claire and Libby Lock then or Tom Claire.
So Tom Claire and Libby Lock are married, second marriage
for him. But I know them and they have a
law firm I believe in suburban DC in Virginia, and
that specializes in making people shut up through intimidation. They
tried it with me, and in a really brutal, cruel way.

(01:23:59):
I would say, to try and to scare you into
shutting up, so that itself, I don't think anyone regards
Tumbclaire as a good lawyer at all, but certainly you
know his behavior is designed to intimidate you. So the
fact that they hired them at the outset, that's the
behavior of someone who just like wants to scare you
into shutting up.

Speaker 9 (01:24:18):
Is it?

Speaker 1 (01:24:18):
I mean, it's just so weird And does it matter?
Does it matter if Brigitte Macrome was a guy, because
if you delve into the if you go any scratch
the surface back when the two of them met, she
Brigitte Macrome was a teacher and Emmanuel Macrone was fourteen

(01:24:42):
years old, So technically, I mean, if you want to
get that into the weed's a she was grooming and she,
you know, raped a minor. I mean, if you want
to delve that deep into it. But and Guru says,
maybe they thought it was none of your business and

(01:25:02):
they didn't want to dignify you with an answer. I
thought the same thing. But colored it strikes me as
being really really sus I guess, for lack of a

(01:25:23):
better lack of a better term, because it's kind of
like the whole Michelle Obama thing. Are there pictures of
Michelle Obama pregnant? Oh that's a good question. I never
thought about that, Thank you. Yeah, I'm I don't think
there are who knows that any even if there are? Artists? Point,

(01:25:45):
are they real? And is you know, is Michelle Obama
or was she a dude? After twenty twenty, I I
don't know.

Speaker 5 (01:25:59):
I'm of the opinion who gives a shit? Quite honestly,
I don't.

Speaker 1 (01:26:02):
Well, she was a dude, yeah, I really it doesn't matter.
But it goes to it goes to what if they're
lying about this? What else are they lying to?

Speaker 5 (01:26:12):
Maybe so, maybe so? But have they ever lied about it?
Has anyone ever said as Obama Barack ever said no,
she wasn't a dude. I've never heard him say those words.

Speaker 1 (01:26:26):
So is he lying? What's he lying about? Is it lying?

Speaker 5 (01:26:30):
The fact that he just doesn't come right out and
say she was? I mean after twenty twenty. I mean,
look to me, the importance of the liberals going the
direction of trans LGBTQ, all this other stuff makes sense

(01:26:52):
that she would have been a dude. But in my
Obama or no Obama, Michelle uh, in my life, I
don't give a damn whether she was a dude or not.

Speaker 1 (01:27:05):
I don't care. Shouldn't we know the why? Because she
was the first Lady of the United States? Why Why
do we? Why? Why should because they are representing our country,
they are elected officials of the United States. And if
we're going to have them in the white in the
Constitution that we're required to know whether she was a

(01:27:27):
dude or not. Does that not make her compromised? If
in fact it's a secret, she's I would say, so,
who in who in d C doesn't have a secret?
Is that a trick question?

Speaker 5 (01:27:39):
No, it's not a trick question. Who in d C
doesn't have skeletons.

Speaker 1 (01:27:43):
In the closet? As the president, though, you can be compromised.
Do we want to compromise president? Is that a good idea?
What makes him compromised? Because he married a chick that
used to be a dude. That makes him compromised? I
think he could make that argument.

Speaker 5 (01:28:00):
Yeah, okay maybe, but no, I don't. In my life,
I don't give two ships now here. Here's the thing.

Speaker 1 (01:28:08):
If if.

Speaker 5 (01:28:10):
Former first Lady used to be a dude, Michelle Obama
was running the country, completely different idea in my mind.

Speaker 1 (01:28:20):
Do you not think that she, as the first Lady,
has the ear of the president laying on the pillow? Yeah,
slapping him with her.

Speaker 5 (01:28:29):
Look look, look, look, look, No, I just I don't.

Speaker 1 (01:28:34):
I don't it doesn't look I don't care. I don't care.

Speaker 6 (01:28:38):
What.

Speaker 1 (01:28:38):
Yeah, I don't care.

Speaker 9 (01:28:39):
What.

Speaker 1 (01:28:40):
I'm with you on that. However, it's like, wait a second,
these are things I think that we should know about
the president, the leader of the free world. And again,
if they lie about that, what else will they lie
to us about? I mean, if we're willing to just say, well,
they all lie, screw it. You know we've got a
liar in there, big deal? Whoop? Who what's for lunch?

(01:29:01):
Who doesn't lie? And if you give me a name,
I'll call you a liar? Are you threatening me with
a good time?

Speaker 5 (01:29:13):
Yeah, because everybody right now is yelling the word Jesus.
Are we sure about that?

Speaker 1 (01:29:20):
Are we sure about what? He wasn't lie? Who that
would be? Ron at the dailymojo dot com. I'm just
asking the question.

Speaker 5 (01:29:30):
I didn't say he was, but I did say, if
you can tell me, give me the name of someone
who doesn't lie, and I'll call you a liar.

Speaker 1 (01:29:40):
You friends, Obama ordered just sixty thousand dollars worth of
hot dogs from Chicago to the White House in the
middle of the night. These deep staters are sick people.
George Washington, Missy thirteen, says he wasn't a liar. He couldn't,
He couldn't lie. I'm pretty sure Old Cherry he probably

(01:30:02):
lied about it to start the sale. I think. I
don't look.

Speaker 5 (01:30:07):
Mccrone's wife, Michelle Obama.

Speaker 1 (01:30:10):
Uh, it goes to a deep seated does it, like
who are yeah? Who are these people? Because when you
get down deep into it and Canice Owens gets into
the somebody was getting deep into it. Hell, the all

(01:30:30):
of the child molestation, this all this all folds into
all of that and why uh they were trying to
normalize this whole lgbt Q child transition thing.

Speaker 5 (01:30:44):
Oh, there is absolutely no doubt about that.

Speaker 1 (01:30:47):
And it all folds down into that, which I just
don't have time to fold everything down into that. But
I have to make a hole. I've had two holes.
I've got two shim any Christmas? I am. I am.
I'm surrounded by holes I need to make. I'm just
gonna make one right now, Okay, I'm and then we'll

(01:31:09):
continue this on the other side of the Daily Mojo,
The Daily Mojocenzo onn twenty five and the Rumbo chat

(01:31:33):
room brings up a good point. What are canvases skeletons?
I don't know much about, of course they do, and
and I don't know. I mean, I I have plenty,
you know, most of them. I've done things I'm not
proud of. I've spent the I've spent a couple of
nights in La County jail. Build's character. Uh uh, freeb

(01:32:02):
thirty eight said. The Bible says Jesus was perfect in
every way and he never sinned. Read the Bible. Sometimes
we're on dirty heathen. Uh, Jesus was human. Yeah, I'm
I'm just going to leave it there. Okay, let that

(01:32:24):
pot all right, I can get I can get you
a bigger shovel if you want one. I don't need
to keep digging with a little one. Don't shovel m Yeah.
Pekaple says, anything you're trying to keep secret is potential
fuel for blackmail. And that's why it's important that we
know things like this about people who are occupying the
White House.

Speaker 5 (01:32:45):
But that I can see, I can see that it
could be used.

Speaker 1 (01:32:49):
Yeah, that's why I said you've got secrets, and you said,
you know who doesn't have secrets? Of course, Well, everybody has.
But that's why if you're part of the machine, they'll
protect your secrets as long as you're useful. Now I
know who's chomping at the bit, or is it champing
at the bit chomping to get into the conversation.

Speaker 11 (01:33:08):
He's the managing editor at CBN News, the host of
the Quick Start podcast.

Speaker 1 (01:33:13):
And the moral center of the Daily Mojo radio program,
which we need. He is Dan Andros especially Ron Dan.
He did Jesus ever lie? Nope? There you go. Ron
was questioning that earlier, so I thought we would I
bring that, toss that one in there. I just as

(01:33:34):
I'm walking by the door, I just toss that grenade's
claim Jesus was human, that we that we weren't sure
that Jesus never lied fully god fully man? Right? Ron?
I mean that's the question. You said, how how do
we know that Jesus?

Speaker 5 (01:33:52):
What I said was, it was, tell me the name
of a person who's never lied, and I'll call you
a liar and then I'll win. Well, everybody's yelling the
name of Jesus right now.

Speaker 1 (01:34:03):
And then he said, but how do we know that?
That was the That was the key? That was the key?

Speaker 5 (01:34:08):
And somebody told me to read the Bible. I'm a heathen,
So there's that.

Speaker 12 (01:34:14):
So Dan go, I'm still a little confused on the claim.
Are you claiming that Jesus was a liar? No, I'm
not right, didn't.

Speaker 1 (01:34:26):
How do we know that he wasn't a liar? I
said he was? That was the actual question. How do
we know that he wasn't a liar? Right? Because are
you saying because he's human is the answer? Or little
Jesus that's five years old, ten years old? Whatever?

Speaker 5 (01:34:43):
Did you take that bread off the table? No, ma'am,
I don't know that he didn't do that unless the
Bible tells me Jesus was just I mean, maybe he did.

Speaker 1 (01:34:54):
Maybe he did. Maybe I should shut up. Well, the
Bible said he let us live a sinless life.

Speaker 5 (01:34:59):
So okay, all right, then I stand corrected.

Speaker 1 (01:35:03):
Ron wants so desperately out of this conversation right now.
I'm just having a good time just watching. If I
desperately want it out, I wouldn't be on the screen
right now. But no, But now in their head, you're going,
I can't I can't get I can't punch myself out
right now because then I'll say something about it, and
then they'll just won't let it die. So I've got
to stay here and act like and right now. Then

(01:35:24):
I'll have a conversation with this. Barack Obama and Michelle
Obama are not Jesus that I agree with. Thank It's okay, Yes,
I think we've got pretty much. Yes, now you have
a winner, all right now?

Speaker 9 (01:35:42):
So uh No.

Speaker 1 (01:35:43):
We were talking Dan a little bit earlier about the
Candice Owens thing with Bridget Macrone and the fact that
Emmanuel mcrone asked Trump to somehow get Candice Owens to
shut up talking about Bridget Macrone and does it matter
whether or not she was ever a man? It doesn't
matter whether or not Michelle Obama was ever a man?

(01:36:06):
And is that important? Do we know as citizens of
the United States whether or not the first Lady was
potentially a man prior to becoming a woman? Is that important?

Speaker 9 (01:36:18):
Is that?

Speaker 1 (01:36:19):
Is that something that we have a right to know?
Is it a moral question? Do we morally?

Speaker 5 (01:36:25):
It is a question morally yes? And do we have
the main as the citizen right? Does it affect us?
Is the bigger question?

Speaker 1 (01:36:33):
Do we know that?

Speaker 12 (01:36:35):
I mean, I know Candace claims that Trump was trying
to shut her up on this, but as or that
Macrone was trying to get Trump to get it a.

Speaker 1 (01:36:44):
Do we know that that happened. Or did Candace just
say that that happened. That's a I don't know. Is
she lying about that? Maybe potentially? Sure, I don't know,
kandas have you ever worked with her? I mean, she
didn't know.

Speaker 4 (01:36:57):
She just.

Speaker 12 (01:37:00):
She just has been railing against Trump for months now
and apparently, I mean, I don't watch her show, but
this is what I read people who watch the show
or saying that she does. And then now she's begging
for him to go and intervene and stop this lawsuit
because she's probably gonna lose. If I had to guess,
I'm not a I'm not a legal expert, but.

Speaker 1 (01:37:22):
Yeah, I mean, it's weird to me. I'll be the first.
It's it's based on I meant her her series is
based on a book. There was a citizen, I guess
in France who wrote this book about Bridget Macrone being
formerly a dude and going back to the when she

(01:37:45):
was a teacher and Emmanuel Macrone was fourteen.

Speaker 12 (01:37:48):
So technically it's you know, it's it's she didn't she
presents all this evidence. Didn't she present all this evidence
like her from birth stuff and like her.

Speaker 1 (01:37:59):
Young I've seen that. Yeah, Yeah, she has according well
from what I've seen, I've not seen that. If you've
got it, that's hold on. Pekapul says, maybe we should
spend the rest of the show in prayer for Ron's
confused soul. That's possible. Uh, one never knows, So you

(01:38:19):
might need to because I could probably use all the
prayer I can get right now. Freebie thirty eight says,
we have a consensus, then there, Ron, Barack Obama and
Michelle are not Jesus there you go on a second
because I know I read this. Are you guys second
to look it up? Yeah? Yeah, that's when I'm tap

(01:38:39):
dancing for you. Uh. Drafting Freak says, is it still
a sin if you come clean about it? Well, yes,
it's still a sin, but you're forgiven for it if
you ask forgiveness. That's even I know that as a heathen.
Even I know that. And Ewan and Guru. The hard
thing is not to figure out what is a lie

(01:39:00):
these days, the hard thing is for people to explain truth.
That's good, that's true, see right there, that is a
that's a truth bomb. And Coffee Crew Moca says, I
don't care about Michael Obama. It and again. But what

(01:39:20):
I was saying before we before we had to break,
was that it all folds into this culture that we
are now, that we find ourselves ensconced in in the
lgbt Q.

Speaker 11 (01:39:33):
And the.

Speaker 1 (01:39:37):
It's the not the transition, but what's the word I'm
looking for, the mutilation of kids and their genitals in
the quote unquote transition into the other gender. All of
these things kind of fold in on one another. Cannice
even got into the discussion about Sigmund Freud, and there's

(01:39:59):
some fascinating stuff about Sigmund Freud too. Uh, And I
guess it goes back to Freud believed that yes it
was I if an adult had sex with a child,
yes it was especially if it was in test, yes
it was rape. But the children were partly responsible because

(01:40:23):
they secretly wanted their their dad. It's there's some weird
stuff in Freud's closet. I think we can all agree
on that. But did you find what you're looking for? Yeah?

Speaker 12 (01:40:36):
And there in their legal filings in the defamation lawsuits,
they included documentation that support biographical facts, such as birth announcements, photos,
and the record of her maternal history. They cite items
like photos of a young Brigitte us paper birth notice

(01:41:01):
and evidence that she had children in her previous marriage
as part of their defense. So, I mean, I don't
I don't really know what I've not seen. I mean,
but are you going a book like this? I mean,
think about this. Did you believe anything? Brett Kavanaugh's accuser said.

Speaker 1 (01:41:21):
No, mainly because of part of what she said. What
was her name? She had a funny name. I don't
know her name. I don't remember. I just ridiculous. What
did you say, Ron, I'll look it up, go ahead,
But the the I remember the lazy Ford. That's it
balls Ford. That's how I remember. I knew it was

(01:41:46):
a funny name.

Speaker 6 (01:41:47):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:41:48):
But one of the was it the news anchor that said,
you know, because Ballsy Ford was saying, well, I had
to sneak out of the party after Kavanaugh raped me
because I didn't want anybody to see. And then the
news anchor was like, see, that's proof that it happened.
The fact that no one saw her leave, the fact

(01:42:08):
that we have no witnesses this her leave is proof
that it happened. I'm like, wait, what I was like,
hold on to say? That was a that was a
moment in time. It's the truth because it's coming out
of my mouth right right right.

Speaker 12 (01:42:29):
And you know, I don't know what is Candice's other
evidence other than this book, this guy who's just saying it.

Speaker 1 (01:42:41):
Oh, I'm gonna say. I think I just found a
picture of Michelle Obama pregnant? Is that real? What is her?
I don't know. I just know that the Have you
ever seen a picture of sell Obama pregnant? No, but
I'm not. I'm not looked either. I hadn't either until

(01:43:03):
that there is one. I'm just not.

Speaker 12 (01:43:05):
I mean, here's here's the here's the thing. If they
are actually men, I mean, yes, it's a problem. I
just think that there's a strong likelihood they're not, because
then they would be lying to.

Speaker 1 (01:43:20):
Us, and then they would be they would be lying
to us. Would it matter if Michelle Obama was really
a dude or Brigitte Macrome was really a dude? Does
that matter? Is it our business? I mean, I don't
care about mccron over there, and I can do whatever
they want to do over there in France. It doesn't
bother me.

Speaker 12 (01:43:39):
But I think if you're lying to the American people
in a position as high as a president. Yeah, it's
a problem of just not being truthful. I mean, what
else is youre lying about?

Speaker 5 (01:43:50):
Well, it would be a lie about It would be
a lie of omission because I don't know that I've
ever heard Barack Obama say the words Michelle was not
a man. Therefore, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 12 (01:44:04):
Right, But he also hasn't said Michelle Obama's not an
axe murderer.

Speaker 1 (01:44:09):
So maybe she's an axe murderer too, And.

Speaker 5 (01:44:13):
If we knew that, it would make a difference. I agree,
be a problem, yeah.

Speaker 12 (01:44:18):
People, just because people are claiming I just don't find
you know, I mean a Michelle Obama's a man thing.
I mean, I guess it's funny at times, but it's
I just don't find it's not compelling. The evidence is
not compelling to me at all.

Speaker 5 (01:44:31):
I guess that's the word I would use to do that.
It's not compelling to me. So I don't I don't
follow it.

Speaker 1 (01:44:38):
I don't care.

Speaker 5 (01:44:39):
And it's not that I don't care that she wasn't
a man, it's just I don't care in the beginning
there is that. I mean, I would care if she was.

Speaker 12 (01:44:47):
I just don't. I think there is a almost one
hundred percent chance she's not a man like.

Speaker 1 (01:44:53):
It's just interesting that you said almost a one hundred chance.

Speaker 12 (01:44:58):
Well, I mean, i mean, you never roull something out completely.
I'm just saying it's brad Locks to say extremely unlikely.

Speaker 1 (01:45:06):
Well, yeah, let's let's go back to like my life
on anything but right, let's go back to nineteen eighty five,
and it's someone would to suggest Nancy Reagan had been
a dude. What would the response have been, Oh, yeah,
well you've been mean town on a rail and tarred
and feathered and everything else because you've been so ridiculous

(01:45:27):
that right. But here we are in twenty twenty five,
and it's like, I'm pretty sure that's not true, but.

Speaker 12 (01:45:35):
Oh, because now everyone's well, it's mostly because the trans
thing has become like normalized, so it's more plausible now
in our minds because they're like wow, and people think
they're all kinds of things. Now this guy thinks he's
a plant.

Speaker 1 (01:45:53):
Right, It's things have gotten so crazy that it's all
almost anything, or as let me put it this way,
almost nothing is off the table. Almost nothing is off
is off the table when it comes to greed. When
it comes to and that culture these days, which is scary.

Speaker 12 (01:46:14):
Well, and I think that's why a lot of theories
that because a couple of things have panned out. I
think that a lot of theories come out and people
are like, oh, you know, makes sense, could happen. And
I think that that's how they gain traction now, is
because things are so crazy now that yeah, people are like, well,

(01:46:36):
I guess I'm not going to roll it out because
every time I roll something out, it's like, well, I guess, uh,
I guess I shouldn't.

Speaker 1 (01:46:43):
Have ruled now on out want shame on you fool
me twice, shame on me? Right, And people are just
insane now. So yeah, for the for the most part,
people are they are, They're crazy. I saw this story
over at at faith Wire, the story about Elvis and

(01:47:07):
the the Bible that he owned is I guess it's
now on on display at a church in the in England.

Speaker 9 (01:47:16):
And.

Speaker 1 (01:47:17):
I thought, you know, what, would you see this this
sort of thing from someone today because think of the
you know, Elvis, obviously he he was a significant influence
on the culture. Initially when he came out, it was oh,
we can't you don't you shake the head from the
waist down. Yeah. Oh, that's that's going to cause uh,

(01:47:41):
it's going to cause immorality to run rampant throughout the
throughout the country. Yes.

Speaker 12 (01:47:46):
Actually, thankfully, morality hasn't gotten worse since uh since the
nineteen fifties.

Speaker 1 (01:47:53):
So they were totally wrong about that one success. We
can are you saying we can blame all of this
on Elvis? I would say that. I mean it's had
some some guilt in this as well, then too, Let's
blame it on whoever the producer was that said, yeah,
just shoot the hips, let's roll with it. See what happens.

(01:48:14):
See what I don't show his hips? It's because what
could possibly go wrong? In culture?

Speaker 4 (01:48:23):
Hey?

Speaker 12 (01:48:23):
Man, that's a wonderful Adams Apple you got there? I
mean that's where that's what's happened. It's like, I just
show the hips. What could go wrong?

Speaker 1 (01:48:33):
Hey, how's that polyamorous relationship going? Hey, how's how's your
marriage to the house plant?

Speaker 11 (01:48:40):
Do?

Speaker 1 (01:48:40):
And you guys still get right? Okay?

Speaker 4 (01:48:42):
Right?

Speaker 12 (01:48:42):
Nineteen fifties over here, we're like, oh, it's just shaking
the hips, nobody, what could possibly go wrong?

Speaker 1 (01:48:49):
Oh you're making love to a tree. That's interesting, love
is that, Dan, I don't know why. I know plant
lovers this and this is actually from the I want
to play this because it's from the eighties. This is
one of those times and Ai has actually done something
amusing and relatively entertaining and actually it makes a point.

(01:49:14):
And thank you Kiki for sending this to me. He
made it back. I was twenty twenty five.

Speaker 12 (01:49:20):
I heard no one talks face to face anymore, and
everything's lived through something called social media.

Speaker 1 (01:49:24):
I heard people don't even know their neighbors anymore. They
don't knock on doors. They just talk through something called Instagram.
The pillows Instagram. Sure, no one even goes outside anymore.
Everyone just stares at screens all day.

Speaker 5 (01:49:38):
Man, that's messed up.

Speaker 1 (01:49:40):
Dude.

Speaker 11 (01:49:41):
It's nineteen eighty five and the release of the film
DHG Goonies.

Speaker 1 (01:49:44):
Forget twenty twenty five and come here. We want you here, Yeah,
we want you here. We got your ticket. Man, it'll
be awesome if you could come back. This is how
we always look in hindsight at the past, though, because
this is the eighties, and in the eighties we were
all well, you know, back in the fifties, everything was great. Yeah,

(01:50:06):
and now here. It is twenty twenty five, is man.
I was saying in the eighties, forty freaking years ago.
Now everything was Everything wasn't great in the eighties, but
it certainly was arguably better. From I a lot of studies,
I think the yes, yeah, I agree that phenomena is

(01:50:29):
evergreen from generation generation right. Oh they weird.

Speaker 12 (01:50:32):
This generation sucks because the other one was great. That
that is, that's the thing, right, But there is something
to the screen thing. I am a you know, people
often talk what is Yes, there's some good, a lot
of good that social media does, and the connectivity and
everything else. But I'm one hundred percent convinced now that
the that the if you had to slice it up

(01:50:54):
in a good bad pie chart or some sort of
graph on the how has social media affected us? And
I think it's overwhelmingly negative.

Speaker 1 (01:51:04):
I mean, I just Ron's about to jump you.

Speaker 5 (01:51:08):
No, I've been rand before that I think social media
is going to be the bane of our existence.

Speaker 12 (01:51:14):
And he even just that and just phone like, uh,
you know, we were at an event the other day
and like, you know, a lot of younger people were
sitting around and they're all in the same room face
to face one another, half talking and all just going
like like they cannot function unless they're looking at a

(01:51:34):
phone Like that is like it's like that's how you
like in the awkward moment that I don't know what
to do, I just pull out my phone and just
starts strolling and you look and they're.

Speaker 1 (01:51:42):
Just scrolling Instagram. They're just st like why do you
need to do that? Right now?

Speaker 12 (01:51:46):
You're literally around people like I don't know, have you
ever seen those videos of they pop up on acts
every now and then it's just like, hey, remember what
school was like in nineteen ninety one, and like it's
just somebody had like a handicam or something and they're
walking around and it just looks like everyone looks happy.
They're all kind of laughing, just goofing around in.

Speaker 1 (01:52:09):
The hallway like I don't know, now, people walking down
the hall and they're just doom scrolling. You know. It's
like you're you're doing it right now. You're doing what
I am but talked about. But there's a difference with
the technology. I'm me they were were they are you
telling me? Complicated?

Speaker 5 (01:52:30):
In the nineties and eighties, it just wasn't. It doesn't
feel like it was anyway.

Speaker 1 (01:52:33):
Listen, there were miserable people. There's listen, there's people who
are miserable and sad back then too. Yes, I get it.

Speaker 12 (01:52:39):
I'm just saying like in general, like if you look
at the overall vibe, like people are buried in their
screens now, that cannot be better. It can't be better
to just sit there and stare at your screen and
then get in your silo. I mean, people hate each
other now, like, Oh, this guy's damn Trump side. Yeah,

(01:53:01):
look at this. I'm gonna I'm gonna, I'm gonna look
at Karen. You know, I'm gonna.

Speaker 1 (01:53:05):
It's just I just brought idiots now that it's idiocracy
is a big is a problem. We don't seem to.
We we silo, and we.

Speaker 12 (01:53:19):
We silo, and we build up our defenses against anything
not exactly what we believe, and we're able to just
build that silo up so strong while we're staring at
our screen. I do think we've just lost the ability
to function without a phone.

Speaker 1 (01:53:40):
Like I'm I won't argue. I do you not feel
when you leave the house if you don't have your phone?
How do you feel weird? Yeah?

Speaker 12 (01:53:52):
You feel like well, I could get screwed here if
I get lost or my car breaks down or something.
I you know, I'm actually gonna I'm actually my family's
currently we're transitioning, but I'm.

Speaker 1 (01:54:07):
I'm one of the I think I'm the last one. No,
the the iPhone.

Speaker 12 (01:54:12):
I think we are switching for transitioning our family off
of well, we didn't have many. Just my older daughter
has one an iPhone, and then my wife had one
and I had one.

Speaker 1 (01:54:24):
I have one. She got rid of her. My wife
got rid of hers. She's going back to GAB and then, uh,
I'm probably gonna switch to GAB. There was just a
couple of work things. I had to figure out.

Speaker 12 (01:54:36):
What I can I thought that was like a So
GAB is just like a Yeah, it's a it's a phone,
but it's like a smart dumb phone. It only it
only you can limit. It doesn't have internet connectivity. You
can't go on the internet. You can get the like
the you can get some apps, you know, but okay,

(01:54:59):
uh so you can have some functionality like a map
or something that yes, JBB and okay, and it's cheaper.
I mean, I think it's only like twenty or thirty bucks.
A month or something like that for a phone now.

Speaker 1 (01:55:12):
So but we're just gonna do that because I don't
want to you know, it's gonna be a just social
media about to try to get a hold of you. Now,
Like if I need to send you a text, I
can't or is that is not not the case?

Speaker 12 (01:55:22):
You can you can text. You can do basic stuff
like text and and all that. So yeah, I'm not
because you need to send you because that's the functionality
of the Yeah, yeah, you can send picture and well,
link's not going to do anything. We can't count on
the internet. I can't get on the internet. You send
me a link, I'm not gonna going nowhere. No, no Twitter,

(01:55:43):
no Facebook, well, no doom strolling.

Speaker 1 (01:55:46):
We got we got it. We got a Starbucks app
on it. So I guess we're okay there. Yeah, well
that one, that one won't be going on my phone.

Speaker 4 (01:55:55):
No.

Speaker 1 (01:55:55):
You and you've got ESPN on there too, and and
you're not deferred. David g who has been on this
program and he's my age, and he went back to
a flip phone, and now it is a giant pain
in the ass to get in touch with him at
all because if I know, well, there are ways to
do it, but they require extra steps on the part

(01:56:19):
of anybody trying to.

Speaker 5 (01:56:20):
Get primarily and he phone, he doesn't want to text.

Speaker 1 (01:56:24):
Well, he's living large. He's just like whatever.

Speaker 12 (01:56:29):
He's throwing his phone in the lake basically, and he's
touching grass and living life.

Speaker 1 (01:56:35):
So I think David G's winning. I'm looking forward to
this transition of yours. Dan sadly, we have taken all
the time that we are allotted right up, parently and
I know it's crazy, right, asks me about it coming
up on the quick Start podcast today. Oh, Trump's taking

(01:56:56):
over DC military parades inbound. No, I'm just kidding.

Speaker 12 (01:57:01):
Then, Uh, NFL players praying after one of those bad injuries,
just you know, seeing the faith on the field.

Speaker 1 (01:57:10):
And we've got an ex psychic Morris, what's his name
something Morris twitching on Morris, Yeah he was. Yeah, it
took the knee of the head right. Yeah, that was
awesome though, watching the players get together and uh, and
they set up for the game and the uh, the

(01:57:34):
X psychic and the occult warning. You got to cover Wigi.

Speaker 12 (01:57:36):
Boards Jennie's I don't know if they covered wi boards
in the full combo or in the clip we have
on the podcast or not. But but yeah, she talks
about all that kind of stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:57:46):
So all right, Well, in the meantime, I need to
get a hold of the eye, will send you smoke signal. Yes,
carrier pigeons baby, see you, d you guys and gentlemen
from Faith Wire and CBN, and that's a wait a
minutes less go. Yeah, it's all fine, dandy as long
as you know. I tried to get a hold of

(01:58:07):
David G. Literally you do. It's more like a carrier
pigeon type of thing. So I'm sure it'll be fine.
I'm sure it'll be dandy. Good I did there that
There's a two hours of social obstruction known as the
Daily Mojo for today Tuesday, the twelfth day of August,
the year of our Lloyd, twenty twenty five, and we

(01:58:28):
turned to social media to find out. Can you imagine
this program without social media or without technology?

Speaker 4 (01:58:34):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:58:34):
No, woo, that would be that certainly would be original.
Babe over in the Rumble chairm says, I post on Rumble,
but never on YouTube. Every time we try to post
on YouTube, they send us a note basically telling us
you did it wrong. Okay, sorry, let's see over on

(01:58:55):
the ex Pickled Squirrel, I'll totally agree with you to
a point about this, but I wouldn't have met you
boys and others without it, So I'm with you. It's
a tool. It's like you use it as a tool. Yeah,
that's my point, my point exactly. And I think it
uses a distraction when you are around people who you

(01:59:17):
need to be distracted from. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 5 (01:59:20):
It works, It works well if you're an introvert, you
know what I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (01:59:23):
Yes, it dies, and there's nothing better. If you're at
a party with your significant other and you're like, you
need to say something in private, you just send them
a text and you're like, right, you look at each
other from across the room like okay, you say the
magic We're out of here. It's great as a tool
for that. And over in the Daily Mojo chat room,
dead Chad Boy says me too, damn straight, pound me too.

(01:59:48):
You're welcome. That's for the rest of you. Remember that
we the people mustang together, otherwise we shall shortly hanging separately.
Six separate. Duratisy is a stupid good night, Doug Thompson

Speaker 3 (01:59:56):
Wherever you are loved it is Bash listen at the
Dailymojo dot com
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