Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the Daily Mojo podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
The basis will be Rye read Mother's idea. The simmer
flame keeps the water boiling gently while the cheese is melting,
so that Sally can go on to weather Tech interrupt
this program for a special news bullet.
Speaker 1 (00:18):
Thank god, it's.
Speaker 3 (00:20):
Again my mojojo.
Speaker 1 (00:48):
Help.
Speaker 4 (00:50):
I don't care about you.
Speaker 5 (00:58):
Adjust your mojo now, SAT Radio with an attitude. This
(01:21):
is your daily mojo freedom.
Speaker 6 (01:25):
Money indeed, and it's your mojo master here real Brad
Stags on this side, reil Ron Phillips over on that side.
And the Malta track ruts right down the middle, Malta
track ruts.
Speaker 1 (01:40):
What are those of those?
Speaker 6 (01:42):
That's another conundrum. It's another it's something else to ponder.
That was here long before we were. And how in
the hell did they do them? There? About four thousand
well some people say they're four thousand years old, but
they're right up there with the pyramids, They're right up
there with who took down the twin towers. Because apparently
(02:06):
that's the truth is coming to light. I mean, it's
so many things that we are now. Oh and guess
what we did as a country. What but back in
the fifties. Did you know that we well, I say we,
the CIA, the government at that time in the United
States and in England, decided that it was in our
(02:26):
best interest, well the best interest of our oil companies,
to take out the democratically elected leader of Iran, and
so we staged the CIA, along with the British intelligence folks,
staged a coupdtat in Iran and took out the democratically
elected leader in favor of the shaw of Iran. You
(02:49):
know that, I mean, it's things that happened before and
is at our fault? Do we mean? I didn't do it.
I don't claim any responsibility for it. So it's not
we did it. It's not my fault. Whose chair is that?
That's not my chair. But you start looking back in
history and you realize, hell, nothing is as we were
(03:11):
told that it was. I mean, we had to we
had to take out the I mean, this is exactly
what happened like twenty years ago. We have got to
get rid of them, got to get rid of the
people that are in charge of afghan got to get
rid of the people who are in charge of Iraq,
got to get rid of it, people who are in
charge of Iran good. Well after we put him in,
(03:32):
you know, we put him in and we took him out.
It just you know, every now and then, if you
stop and look around, you realize we're all being played
like a bunch of fiddles. And then there's the track
runs these damn things. These are up there with the vases,
the uh the Egyptian bases, which you will get a
(03:54):
copy of the Egyptian vases in the next box as
a daily mode. Joe the Insider, which level do you
need to be to be that?
Speaker 7 (04:05):
To the cool, the patrons and the founders.
Speaker 6 (04:08):
Another box is going out in UH September, and there
will be if you're not If you're unfamiliar with the
vases that were made in Egypt thousands of years ago,
they are we can't make them today. They're that good.
We would have trouble. I say, we can't. I'm sure
there's a way we could. They would be a prohibitively
(04:30):
expensive and be there were I say, there would be
no need for them. You can find vases that are
as exquisitely made as the ones that were made in
Egypt thousands of years ago on the outside, but these
were also made exquisitely on the inside. And if you've
(04:51):
ever looked inside like an expensive vase that you would
buy at this store that is not you know, crystal
or whatever that you can see through. If you ever
looked in side, like a quartz vase, they're not pretty
on the inside. They're not finished, because why would you
You're gonna stick flowers in there. You're gonna stick whatever
you stick in your vase. It's your vase. You can
(05:14):
stick in whatever you want to stick in, sure, but
you wouldn't necessarily take the time as a manufacturer to
make it pretty on the inside. Like Ron and I are. Yes,
we are, we are pretty on the inside. If you
don't know that by now, there's something wrong with you.
But these vases were made again thousands of years ago,
(05:34):
and they were you can't make them without some sort
of incredible equipment. And by incredible equipment, I mean like
seriously precision tools. And they don't know how they made them.
They're like, well, if they if they made these, they
had to have some sort of machine. Let's see here,
(05:57):
this is uh yeah, here areas. I believe this is
one of the examples. It's a pre dynastic Egyptian vase.
I mean it's it's pretty, but it's also precise. It's
done within like three thousands of an inch. Any human
hair is like what two thousands of an inch something?
(06:19):
I mean tiny, infinitesimal almost, And those vases, vases were
made so perfectly that we have no idea how they
made them. Kind of like the the ruts you ever
heard of the Maltese ruts? Anxious to hear about them?
(06:41):
These ruts are they run through places like Malta? There
are even some in Texas. These are in stone. These
are these are ruts that look like again wagon wheel
ruts made in like soft dirt or clay. The thing
is they're made in stone. These are literally cast in
(07:04):
stone and were made thousands of years ago, and we're like,
how the hell did they do that? They're they're made
before I believe that they are. There was even credit
for the wheel. What's what hadn't what's out rock made
the wheel?
Speaker 7 (07:18):
I don't see like horse tracks in there either.
Speaker 6 (07:21):
And it's kind of weird. It's almost like they had
their own power. Yeah, it's almost like they were driving
cars thousands of years ago. The rock that it's made,
that you'll find these tracks in most often, or I guess,
I don't know if it's all the time, but most often,
uh is uh it's a volcanic what do they call it?
(07:43):
Is it ignacious not father ignacious igneous rocks? Yeah. Uh
so it's volcanic ash and wood, ash and water. It's
like concrete almost. It's what Roman concrete was was made
out of.
Speaker 7 (08:02):
And Harriot it would still have horse drawn, right.
Speaker 6 (08:07):
I mean, all you got to do just look up
Maltese track ruts and you will you will see dozens
of pictures on the interweb there are uh, where where
are these? I guess these are the some of the
Malta Malta cart ruts. I mean there's there's a whole
bunch of them there and they often will lead straight
(08:28):
into the water. They'll go underwater. It's like, what the
hell made these things?
Speaker 1 (08:35):
And it uh.
Speaker 6 (08:39):
One of the theories is that the they were like
like Ron said, where where are the where are the animal?
Where's the power? Where's the where's the engine? So to speak.
It's maybe maybe something like that. I'd but you'd think
with with ruts run that deep into the into the dirt,
(08:59):
you'd see a lot more horse of marks there right
that you don't. But the way this happened was that
they were either either these wheels were bad ass and
they cut right through rock, or they were plowed through
this rock before it solidified into rock, but it was
just still kind of a soft concrete if you will,
(09:22):
and then that then it hardened up over time like
much like concrete does. But again we're going back to
a time when wait, they had wagons, they they had wheels.
What was pulling them? Maybe it was an overhead pulley system,
maybe they had electrified engines back then. It just goes
(09:42):
to show how very little we know about what happened
before we got here. And every time we're told that they, oh, yeah,
we know exactly, they don't. They have no idea this
This started off on my part this morning looking up
or looking at the argument for how old the Earth is?
(10:05):
Is it six thousand years old? Is a four and
a half billion years old? Because you'll get arguments on
both sides of it, and the carbon fourteen dating that
they have, you know, we like to say, hey, carbon
fourteen is really accurate, but it's it's it's riddled with
questionable results, and we really don't know. It's it's trust
(10:28):
the science. So we're always told trust the science, but
in this case science is a little wonky. But the
Maltese cart ruts believed to be at least four thousand
years old, with some theories suggesting they could be even older,
possibly dating back to the Neolithic or Temple period. Of course,
you know, I know what the Temple period was. We'll
go ahead and tell everybody where the Temple period was
(10:50):
in the history of Yeah, I don't. I don't have
a clue between thirty eight hundred and twenty five hundred BC.
Some researchers even speculate that they could be linked to
a time when sea levels were lower, potentially as old
as two or excuse me, as ten thousand years old.
Those would be some old wagon ruts. Now ten thousand
(11:11):
years ago, wasn't that when people were still like walking
around grunting blog, liked to eat grog, need coconuts, grog
was apparently out there making wheels at the time. There's
no definitive answer. Various theories the precise purpose and age
of the cartwrights remain a subject of debate and ongoing research.
(11:34):
According to many sources of the information that you can
find on the interwebs. What the hell did we do
before the interweb? What did we do before? At night,
we were talking yesterday lives in peace. Well, we're living
our lives now. We lived our lives in ignorance. I'm
not sure that was a better idea. But we had
(11:54):
yesterday on Keith's show at the Mic from two until
four yesterday afternoon, Don Schmidt was once again the guest,
and Don Schmidt is the author of Witness to Roswell,
and we were discussing the fact that they he had
started the whole investigation. He and his writing partner Kevin Randall.
(12:19):
I want to say his name is. I've not met Kevin.
I'm not sure Kevin is still with us, but he said,
we started this back in nineteen eighty nine. How did
you do that? How did you investigate anything? I remember,
going back to nineteen eighty nine when I was doing
shows for the Nashville Network. You had to call people,
(12:40):
call people, go to the library. You had to look
up stuff in a phone bookmocrophy, you had to, Yeah,
you had to. When you checked into the motel, you
asked if there were any messages for you and they
handed you the little pink sheet of paper going while
you were out, and then you went up to your
room and you spent was it nine five a minute
(13:00):
to make a phone call something stupid? Remember that how
expensive phone calls were in hotel rooms.
Speaker 7 (13:07):
Yeah, they gave you local calls free, but didn't you
had to sure?
Speaker 6 (13:09):
Yeah? Yeah, good ones. But and and I was impressed, like, gon,
how did you do? Because he was talking about how
they had to chase down the witnesses who have you know,
the first hand witnesses to the stuff that they found
at Roswell, even the metal. There's one person left, they
believe one person left who was ten at the time,
(13:29):
who handled the medal at Roswell. And they're still trying
to locate her. Wow, they still have it to this day.
So but going back to it, we just we know
so little about everything in our past, very little. And
these ruts are have been driving me nuts. Thank you.
(13:51):
I'll be here all week. Uh but what did what
did make them? Well? I mean there are people have said,
well maybe they were channel for water. Yeah, why would
you have parallel chan then the tracks remain parallel, you know,
And I guess ninety percent of the cases, if not
one hundred percent of the tracks remain parallel, so they
(14:13):
don't ever converge on each Now, some other tracks will
come in and intersect these, but it looks like I mean,
it looks like a road. It looks like ancient roads.
There's an example of them kind of intersecting each other.
But again, this is back when literally when rocks were
(14:35):
soft and down in See where was it in Texas?
It was Travis County, down in Travis County, Texas. They
just because of the flooding that just occurred down there
last last month. Yeah, let's see if I can find
that picture. Where'd I put that? Is that it?
Speaker 1 (14:56):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (14:57):
There it is. They're clearing debris from the from the
floods down in Travis County and they uncovered fifteen dinosaur footprints.
It's kind of hard to see there, but that's a
three toed something rather with you see the one two
three toes and they are how big eighteen to twenty
(15:21):
inches in length, confirmed by a paleontologists, and they are
see do they know exactly what they were? They're unambiguously
dinosaurs that were left by meat eating. The tracks that
are unambiguously dinosaurs were left by meat eating dinosaurs similar
to aarn acardi acro Kenthosaurus. That's a thirty five foot
(15:49):
long bipedal carnivore. And how old are those How old
are those tracks? We had no idea. James and Louisiana
on the Rumble chat room says, for twenty bucks, Brad
will show everyone the picture of what I mean. I
might for twenty bucks, I'll do a lot of things.
(16:10):
Might show you the picture if you want to get
on the conversation. By the way, this morning the hashtag
what I learned today at Real bradstags at Real Ron Phillips.
There's a lot happening again today in the world of
politics and science and so forth. But this this is
how I started off my day, trying to figure out
what the hell happened four thousand years ago, Because if
(16:30):
you don't know your history, how are you going to
know what to do today when things happen. You don't
want to do the same crap they did in the past.
Speaker 1 (16:39):
Do you?
Speaker 6 (16:40):
Stuff that may or made out of worked? And I
told Ron just before the program began of something that
I learned this morning as well, which was pretty fascinating.
Was it not.
Speaker 7 (16:50):
What was it?
Speaker 6 (16:52):
What'd you say? I don't remember? Wow, so soon you
forget give me something so soon? So soon they forget Florida.
Man in Alabama, those are all pre flood structures, be
for the Noah's flood. Yeah, Noah's flood. That's again, that's
a fabulous You go back and look and did they
(17:15):
find Noah's Ark in Turkey and the mountains around air
a Rat. I don't know. I don't know either. They
look like they may have.
Speaker 7 (17:23):
They have, yeah, but they can't they can't explore it.
Speaker 6 (17:28):
Well the Turkey, well, Turkey has a little visitor center
set up around where the arc is thought to be.
So yeah, they won't let him excavate anymore or something
like that. But oh it's the cat. Well, Doc Kitty,
by the way, is he is off? He moves around
(17:52):
the motel. He will for a period of time he
will light in his chair here. Then for the rest
of it he'll go somewhere or else in the motel.
He's a little he's a little whore. He's everywhere. I mean,
But that's just it's cats, you know, That's how that works.
Over in the in the X clock Tower, drunk, the
(18:16):
gods must be crazy. Indeed, you've seen that op syncle, right, Yeah,
it's funny, fascinating, yeah, says But before the Internet, there
were encyclopedias in our own two feet. The wheel was
invented around thirty five hundred BC and Mesopotamia. They think
they don't know. I mean, that's that's where that One
of the first examples was deuce five, says Hell's bells.
(18:43):
I still remember having to learn the Dewey decimal system
at the library. By the way, how much good has
that done over the course of your lifetime? Dewey decimal system.
I hated that thing. We still know little of what
really goes on today because they lie all the time,
Ghost says Indeed, and that's kind of the point of
(19:05):
all this is that we just we know so little
about anything that has happened around and to us, and
when you try to go and learn about it, it's
not easy because a lot of the truth is obfuscated,
a lot of it is hidden. We deal each and
every day with liars who are in Washington, DC and
(19:29):
other places of centralized government. Karen Bass. When Phil Bell
will be here in the next portion of the program,
he has an example of Karen Bass out there just
run in her mouth and lie in like a like
a dog on a rug. It's just the whole thing
(19:50):
is just disgusting. This portion of the program, by the way,
is brought to you by the fine folks over at
getmojocbd dot com. Because it is Friday, we have limited
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(20:10):
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You just get to a point where you're like, you
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to get Ronie to get up every day and blow
dry his hair. He's got a style it. He's got
(20:32):
to put the Ji's in his hair there and just
I mean it makes it all nice. And shoot, don't
see your hair. Go ahead and shove me.
Speaker 8 (20:39):
I don't.
Speaker 7 (20:39):
I don't do anything.
Speaker 6 (20:40):
Come on, let's see it. Nothing. Well, it's getting a
hold on dip your head for a little bit, getting
a little tham. Is that what you say? Yeah? I mean,
I'm not saying you should consider shaving a bad boy off,
but you look, hey, you do you? It's okay. I
held on to mine long, long past its prime. But
(21:03):
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the sponsor of this portion of the program. Here the
Daily Mojo for Friday. It is payday. It's the fifteenth
day of August. Holy crap, time is flying? Is it not?
Speaker 7 (21:20):
It's the eyes of August? Is that what you're saying?
Speaker 6 (21:23):
I believe it is the IDEs of August? I had not,
Thank you. The IDEs of August are upon us, and
we'll uncover more of their lies. And who was the
first woman? I should say? Put it this way? Has
there ever been a woman playing in the NFL? I
(21:45):
think I remember. Wasn't there a punter or an Let
me back that up just a little bit. Okay, I
don't believe it was the NFL at the time. Oh okay,
professional football. It may have been the NFL, but it
was professional football. And would you say I said a
punter or a kicker, dude, I'm impressed. Oh thanks, wait
(22:06):
until you hear the story coming up back.
Speaker 1 (22:11):
Thank god it's Friday.
Speaker 4 (22:14):
Hey, where are the white women at the Daily Mojo?
Speaker 6 (22:21):
Plade roberts, Oh, what I would do for forty bucks?
Isn't it funny how your standards change over the course
of your lifetime. You get you hit like thirty forty
years old, you're like, because there are things you wouldn't
do at twenty, right, I mean it's like, oh, hell no,
you wouldn't catch me doing that.
Speaker 9 (22:39):
You get to sixty, you're like, say, twenty twenty bucks
forty Oh hell, I'll put a bow on it for
forty bucks, damn straight.
Speaker 6 (22:55):
John Klatta says, just look, the last time Cal posted
on X was in twenty twenty two. S Cal's fine, Well,
as far as I know. I haven't talked to him
in a short bit. But now that I've said that, see,
I don't want to give it the fecal touch. I'm
not going to don't. I don't stop it. I'm sure
he's fine. I'm sure. I mean he's fine.
Speaker 4 (23:15):
For Cal.
Speaker 6 (23:16):
It was on the fifteenth day of August in nineteen
forty six that the Dumont Television Network began operations.
Speaker 7 (23:23):
Remember that you said Dumont, not DuPont.
Speaker 6 (23:25):
I did say Dumont, Dumont, Alan B. Dumont and the
Dumont Television Network. It was the first licensed television network.
It connected New York's WABD and DC's W three x WT. Boy,
the jingles for that station were amazing, weren't they W
(23:46):
three XWTV. They aired the first TV situation comedy, which.
Speaker 7 (23:53):
Was called The Honeymooners.
Speaker 6 (23:56):
What Mary? Kay? And Johnny? But you ron you? Okay?
Did you take your vitamins this morning?
Speaker 4 (24:06):
Yes?
Speaker 10 (24:07):
Why?
Speaker 6 (24:07):
Because I don't know?
Speaker 4 (24:08):
Mary?
Speaker 6 (24:08):
Because you're hip, You're no. But Jackie Gleason? Oh?
Speaker 7 (24:12):
Was that was he? Johnny and Mary?
Speaker 6 (24:15):
Jackie Gleason went on to famous host of the variety
show Cavalcade of Stars. Yeah, I mean hi, I just knew.
Speaker 7 (24:24):
The Money Letters was an early sitcom.
Speaker 6 (24:26):
So don't come on. Give yourself some credit. Well, give
yourself some credit. Dumont went out of business in nineteen
fifty six. The parent company, though Dumont Laboratories, was a
television equipment and set manufacturer and was looking to boost
sales with their broadcasting. They had a beautiful. Uh, let's
see if I can show you the picture of a second.
(24:48):
It's a beautiful television. And I mean you could hang
this thing on the wall today and people love it.
Whereas right right there, look of that bad boy. Can
you imagine putting that the TV's the one on the right,
hanging that thing on it. You wouldn't want to sit
on that thing, would you? New Sarrebobski that there is
(25:12):
the uh that is the first television that the Dumont
company put out. Before we get into I wanted to
show you this too, because this is pretty damned amaze balls.
When you think you're having a rough day, imagine, First
of all, would you even be out here in the
first place. This is a They are I guess Arctic
(25:34):
explorers and they decided to get on this iceberg. Kind
of look around. So they're out there. You know that
waters my old watch what happens to the iceberg? Quick
whacken on the berg there there.
Speaker 7 (25:54):
They have no idea that that iceberg is balanced in
such a way.
Speaker 6 (25:59):
You look at that. That made me lose my breath.
Come get us, I would be dead. I would as
soon as that thing started. First of all, I wouldn't
be on it to begin with, because.
Speaker 7 (26:19):
Yeah, both of them, watch that thing move. Both of
them finally got out from underneath it, but that last
one was like barely.
Speaker 6 (26:26):
You know, you know, have you jumped in jumped into
a pool and the water's cold and it takes your
breath away?
Speaker 7 (26:32):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (26:32):
Can you can you imagine what that would be because
you're you're out there. First of all, you're on a
damned iceberg to begin with, and and you know that
water is cold as hell, which is really kind of
a stupid saying, because hell isn't cold at all. But
you know that thing starts to tip and you start
to you start to panic a little bit, you would
(26:53):
big time lose your breath.
Speaker 1 (26:55):
Wow.
Speaker 6 (26:55):
I just That's one of those things I came across
this morning that I thought was fascinating. I thought I
would share this. It was on this day in nineteen
seventy the first woman to play football in a predominantly
male professional league. That's why I say, I don't think
(27:17):
it was. I don't think it was the NFL Bridgeport Jets.
Speaker 1 (27:22):
Okay, I'll get it.
Speaker 6 (27:30):
At Palinkas yep. And oh I told you, That's why
I was impressed Ron for most didn't you say, hey,
wasn't she a kicker or a punter? She held the ball.
She held the ball for her husband, who was the
kicker of the Atlanta excuse me, the Orlando Panthers.
Speaker 2 (27:50):
Palinka sat on the bench wondering what it would be
like if she really got in the game.
Speaker 4 (27:57):
Right now, I'm nervous and excited.
Speaker 3 (28:00):
I did an honored and I'm the first woman to
play pro football.
Speaker 5 (28:06):
I'm bad.
Speaker 6 (28:07):
Look, I know she doesn't doesn't look like a lesbian.
What you said, She's not that all lesbians are homely,
because I did not mean to say that. There are
some that are quite attractive. Those are the acceptable ones.
Speaker 11 (28:26):
You know.
Speaker 6 (28:26):
Let's send your complaints to Ron at the Daily Metro.
CBS reporter Sam Roberts, So I asked some Bridgeport players
how they felt about this historic occasion.
Speaker 7 (28:36):
What do you think of the idea of rushing against
the girl is holding job?
Speaker 6 (28:39):
I think we're gonna cry to put it a regression.
Speaker 7 (28:42):
We gon't try to put a rush owner.
Speaker 6 (28:48):
I play that again, because I asked some Bridgeport players
how they felt about this historic occasion.
Speaker 4 (28:54):
What do you think of the.
Speaker 7 (28:55):
Idea of rushing against the girl is holding job.
Speaker 2 (28:57):
I think we're gonna cry to putty quitter a regression.
Speaker 6 (29:00):
Good job, bro, I'm just trying to hurt her intentionally.
Speaker 1 (29:03):
But your name is hard no football.
Speaker 7 (29:05):
The game is hard nose football. You're trying to rush
her intentionally. The game is no.
Speaker 6 (29:11):
Hurt I thought he said. I thought he said hurt her.
Oh maybe he said maybe.
Speaker 7 (29:15):
Against the girl is holding the game.
Speaker 4 (29:17):
I think we're gonna try to put it rush.
Speaker 6 (29:20):
Do you think anybody's going.
Speaker 7 (29:21):
To try and hurt her intentionally?
Speaker 4 (29:22):
Yeah, you caname.
Speaker 2 (29:23):
It is hard no football.
Speaker 6 (29:25):
Yeah, I think anyboy's gonna try to hurt her intentionally. Yeah,
he's a question, is that? What kind of a question
is that? Can you imagine that being? That would be
a triggering question today, would it not?
Speaker 4 (29:36):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (29:36):
Yeah, so I guess you can take the punish people.
You're gonna get out there as a woman. I sure
as hell when you want to.
Speaker 1 (29:44):
Yeah what I felt, prayer?
Speaker 3 (29:48):
Oh I really like it?
Speaker 4 (29:49):
If I don't, you know, climb up, I've got this huge, big.
Speaker 6 (29:53):
Butt slide stalling. It sounds a little like Missy thirteen,
doesn't she I got this huge benefit? Why in my stomach.
I'm gonna go out there. I'm gonna go out there,
I'm gonna take I'm gonna kick their ass. That's what
I'm gonna do it, Like Missy thirteen says, because we're
safety now, haven't we?
Speaker 2 (30:10):
The first touchdown and palinkas came onto the field all
one twenty two.
Speaker 9 (30:20):
Way?
Speaker 6 (30:27):
Yet why don't you know, like.
Speaker 7 (30:29):
You right your ship?
Speaker 4 (30:33):
Now?
Speaker 6 (30:33):
Was this just a publicity stunt when they did it?
I think yes, well, I mean why would they have
done it to begin with? Where I shudn't even know
where to put it down? Sadn't you know what to
put Why do we let women out there in the
football field?
Speaker 11 (30:49):
Like?
Speaker 1 (30:50):
Where?
Speaker 6 (30:50):
What? Where? Put the ball? Where? This is why we
don't play pro football? Where do I go? Right here?
Right now? Thee No one's throwing sex toys on the
field in nineteen seventy. Huh right, I didn't even know
what sex toys were in nineteen seventy. And she botched it,
(31:18):
botched it in nineteen seventies. She broke the internet in
nineteen seventy, first female ever professional football player Orlando Panthers.
She do three things at one time that goes there
(31:40):
this goes here, and this goes over here, and that
was Walter Cronkott. You heard the time in Life magazine
and even the Football Hall of Fame, she is now
in it. She was trailblazer, never let gover passions. That
was nineteen seventy in this on this day, April fifteenth,
(32:00):
excuse me, August fifteenth, and just a little less than
two months ago. She passed away June twenty first, twenty
twenty five. She's still a good looking woman.
Speaker 7 (32:14):
Patrick right, she went by Patrick Palinkas Patrick.
Speaker 11 (32:19):
Well.
Speaker 6 (32:19):
Was she a lesbian? I don't know. She was a trailblazer,
never let go of her passions, her beliefs, or her
love of family. She was a teacher at her course,
spent more than forty years in elementary education, mostly in
Pinellas County. She molded and shaped the minds of many readers,
excuse me, many leaders today. She was a sports enthusiast
who could follow and get excited about any athletic event,
(32:40):
but mostly those of her grandchildren's, either online or in person.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Steve, her
sister Barbara. I mean that's almost what fifty five years
ago when was she twent she was she thirty? And
how old was she? Back then? Jo whined that old
when she died. I mean, think about it. I didn't
(33:03):
say when. You didn't say when she was born? No,
h Wade Robertson said, yeah, that was fake. What was fake?
I cracked back. Treated her different? That would be sex
back Corner says, treating her different, that would be sexist. Right,
you don't want to treat her different. She's out there,
(33:26):
you go to tech. I mean that if well, you're
not supposed to technically, I hate you figures you're not
supposed to get out there and and and rough the
passer or the holder either. I mean that's kind of
bad for him, isn't it. You don't get out there
(33:50):
and and and beat up on the the placeholder. I
mean it's kind of it's it's low hanging fruit. You
just don't. But but by the same token, the rules
were different back in the seventies too. You went out
there and you you were out there for blood. Those
guys hit harder than I mean, they were not effing
(34:10):
around out there on the football field in the seventies.
They were they were going for it. She must have
been she must been royalty in the Dyke Unity. She
went out like Junior Seau, did she? The boy blob
says sorry to hit. Well, we all die, I mean
don't we most of us do? Most of us do.
(34:33):
At the end of the day, most of us end
up dying. And it was also on this day in
nineteen sixty nine. Do you know what happened.
Speaker 7 (34:45):
August fifteen, nineteen sixty nine.
Speaker 6 (34:48):
Ummmm, no, no idea. It begins with wood Woodstock really, yep?
Woodstock began on this day in nineteen sixty nine. Is
that amazing? Nineteen seventy one, But it was nineteen sixty
(35:10):
nine at Woodstock again, four hundred thousand people have attended
the event, an aquarian exposition, three days of Peace and music.
Have you seen the documentary that they did on the
nineteen ninety nine version of Woodstock.
Speaker 7 (35:25):
Huh?
Speaker 6 (35:26):
It was a foster cluck, I mean, straight up foster cluck.
It was. It was. It was a giant because they
didn't they weren't ready for it. They didn't They really
didn't know how to put it on. They didn't have
(35:48):
the location, wasn't ready. They didn't have enough bathrooms, they
didn't have enough cooling, stations. They did it on an
air It was in an Air Force base, so it
was a lot of blacktop. I mean, it was just
what a giant it was? Yeah, it was not. It
(36:08):
was not a pleasant experience for a lot of the
people who were there.
Speaker 2 (36:11):
Uh.
Speaker 6 (36:12):
And we're about to make history coming up. Let's see
when's the meeting. The actual meeting is tomorrow between Trump
and Putin.
Speaker 7 (36:20):
I thought it was today he just left.
Speaker 6 (36:22):
Is it today?
Speaker 7 (36:23):
He just left?
Speaker 11 (36:24):
D C.
Speaker 6 (36:25):
It's gonna be all weekend, right, are thinking chatting? All right,
they're gonna have dinner and drinks. I think. Aren't they
playing some golf?
Speaker 1 (36:35):
I don't know.
Speaker 7 (36:35):
I figured they'd be wrestling. Look, that's why I did this.
I'm sure they're wrestling up there in.
Speaker 6 (36:40):
Such low hanging fruit.
Speaker 1 (36:41):
Now do you do that?
Speaker 6 (36:46):
I mean, granted a lot of here. Putin does look
pretty good without a shirt, for h I held, not
even for his age. I mean, he looks good without
a shirt period. But they're meeting up in Anchorage. Uh?
Is is anything going to come of this?
Speaker 7 (37:05):
I don't know. Zelensky's kind of on edge because he
wasn't invited and they're talking about it because he's a dick.
Speaker 6 (37:11):
He is, he's a giant. He's well, I see giant.
He's a miniature dick. He's like a dwarf dick. It
didn't come out right. But they are meeting today. It's
going to be uh he Trump says, it's going to
(37:32):
be a quick end of the war. He why are
we involved in this? Again? Why? Exactly what? What? Which
dog do we have in the I can't remember, don't
I can't remember why it is that we are? Where
are we? Why are we involved? I mean if we had,
(37:53):
you know, if we had a beef with a country
and in some other country got in and wouldn't we
be pissed off? It was like, what are you doing?
This is our But we will insert ourselves into stuff
like this. Trump says, because of a certain relationship that
he has with me running this country. I believe now
he's convinced that he's going to make a deal. That's
(38:14):
what Trump told Killmead yesterday. He's going to make a deal.
They're going to start at see two three o'clock Eastern,
so two o'clock Central time, which is really the only
time zone that matters. It'll be eleven o'clock in Alaska
at the time. But you know they'll make a weekend
of it. I'm sure that they'll again drinks golf the
(38:36):
home line. Why go to Anchorage, Alaska and not spend
a little time and play a little golf? Yeah, am
I right? Yeah, I mean, and it's not like I
mean again, the United States, it's not like we have
a history of sticking our.
Speaker 2 (38:54):
Well.
Speaker 6 (38:54):
Actually we do kind of have a history of sticking
our nose. And we learned again something this morning that
another example of I'm I am ninety five percent sure
we're in a simulation. And there's just far too many
little things that are falling into place that just just
(39:15):
this morning, and little things that probably mean nothing, but
to me they are just it's another sign that the
I mean, don't you you ever got that feeling around you?
It's just it's things happened too conveniently. I think there's
too many coincidences. You're like, nah, this is no this
(39:36):
has got to be a simulation. Has to be nothing
else makes sense. The how often do you hear the
name Kermit?
Speaker 7 (39:44):
I used to hear it more often, but not I mean.
Speaker 6 (39:47):
Really, but I was used to hear the name Kermit
more often what I was doing I saw because of
the Muppets.
Speaker 7 (39:54):
Yes, thank you. Where else would you hear?
Speaker 6 (39:58):
Well? For for example, when we were dicking around in Iran,
Kermit played a big role.
Speaker 7 (40:07):
Do you know that I did not? It's kermit like
a missile or what? What is it?
Speaker 6 (40:13):
It's a frog? Oh not necessarily that one. We'll get that.
And also in just a second, Phil Bell will join
us live from the nation's capital, the Shining City on it.
Why didn't we send him to Anchorage?
Speaker 7 (40:29):
I don't know, but I hope he talks to us
about freaking bondy Jack in the DC Police Commissioner this
morning or yesterday.
Speaker 6 (40:37):
Probably would have used a different term. But okay, uh crazy, okay,
thank you. The FCC is online one. We'll do that next.
On the daily Mojos.
Speaker 11 (41:00):
Burning down on this nine of five ground clocks sticking
soul like it's.
Speaker 6 (41:06):
Messing with my mind. Boots good before field the waiter
to day but bad whistles gone blowing. I'm on my way,
almost Friday.
Speaker 2 (41:18):
I can taste the night, cold beer in my hand.
Speaker 6 (41:22):
Stars, shining bread, got a fire in my chest, in
my head.
Speaker 12 (41:28):
Almost Fridy, Well it is technically it is Friday dot com.
Speaker 6 (41:40):
It's Friday, It's almost Friday night. I think we should
look at it that way, right, there's a there's a
difference between Friday day and Friday night. You can quote
me on that. Uh, ladies and gentlemen, let's go. Let's
go ahead and bring him in because we have some
serious things to discuss.
Speaker 1 (41:59):
The First Amendment lives here.
Speaker 4 (42:01):
Freedom Friday. Oh, it's freedom Friday. Little bell he got
the freedom in his mojo.
Speaker 6 (42:09):
Your don't don't let me forget today. I'm literally giving away,
speaking of free I'm gonna give away the shirt on
my back. You nice, don't don't.
Speaker 4 (42:23):
That's a great shirt.
Speaker 6 (42:25):
Thank you if you you were, because I'm I'm still
fat and it's a little big on me. You're not.
You're not fat, and so it wouldn't fit you. I
mean you could wear it as a night shirt and
think of me, you know, as you tuck yourself into
bed at night.
Speaker 8 (42:40):
But right right, you mean as big wretch tucks me
into bed. See there you go, thank you, there you go. Right,
that's no helme up. Uh, I just want to really
go ahead me, Can I can I say something? Since
you have you were talking about women playing football. I
put on my Jets jersey because for the past few
years it's been like a bunch of women playing football
(43:02):
when it comes to New York.
Speaker 4 (43:03):
Yes, and that's that's my team. So I can say that, right.
Speaker 6 (43:08):
J E T S j E T S j Ets,
bunch of women just in the season. That's just right.
So I sent this to Phil this morning because I
had again not heard I'd not heard this story before,
but it was I guess next week technically will be
(43:29):
the see ninety fifty three, what the seventieth close to
the second Anniverse something like that. Anyway, of it was
nineteen fifty three that we went in and we the
United States, along with Britain, took out the government of Iran.
And he was a duly elected in in a democrat,
(43:54):
democratically elected leader of a nation. And the reason we
did it was that oil, oil and money oil.
Speaker 4 (44:04):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (44:06):
And I was just you don't hear this story. I
don't think I've ever heard this story before. And you
you were somewhat familiar with it, right.
Speaker 4 (44:17):
Yes, it was Mohammed Mozadiq.
Speaker 8 (44:19):
Now, the thing to remember is it was somewhat I
would say somewhat democratically elected because at that time Iran
still had the Shah, who was a was a monarch,
you know, maybe not a monarch in the sense of
there was a whole line of them, but they I
guess technically two or three of them does count as
a line. But they were able to elect their you know,
(44:41):
some of the government, and that included Mohammed Mozadiq. And
what he did is he nationalized the oil company. Because
for a long time Britain and the United States had
been involved in all of the Arabian era countries with
various various companies. The most notable is a Ramco, which
still exists. It's now Saudi Aramco and it's publicly traded
(45:03):
once again in a small part. But you also had
what's now BP being involved there and Mozadique did nationalize it,
and of course we, you know, we and the British said,
oh no, you can't do that, and so that's what
ended up in his overthrow.
Speaker 4 (45:16):
And this sort of thing did happen in a variety
of places.
Speaker 8 (45:19):
The other that people talk about is Chequita, Banana, because
there was a I can't remember which South American country
or Central American, but yeah, they were not happy with
some of the encroachment on their assets there. So Chequita
Banana did engage in some you know, maybe extracurricular activities
to get rid of leaders that they didn't like, even.
Speaker 6 (45:39):
The big Banana. Literally so this guy so mozadiqu he
and you're right BP. It was at the time the
oil reserves in Iran were owned by the Anglo Iranian
Oil Company, which became right BP. And it was written
(46:00):
and the United States that wanted to control the oil
basically all of the oil coming out of Iran. And
so we go in there, we take out this guy
in favor of the SHAW. We put the SHAW back
into power. And it was the CIA they just released
(46:21):
Let's see when did they It was twenty seventeen that
the State Department released these documents confirming that that's what
we did. Which it amazes me that people refuse to
believe now that agencies like the CIA the FBI get
(46:44):
involved in elections and election fraud and trying to influence
elections and downright cheating in elections, even in this country.
They've been doing it for decades around the world, and
this is just a blatant example of it. And how
do we justify I mean, could you justify something like this? Now?
Speaker 4 (47:06):
Well, so here's the interesting thing.
Speaker 8 (47:07):
I will I will try to justify it in part
and in part because I don't like the CIA. I
don't like what they do, especially since they've tried a
lot of those tactics as we know here domestically.
Speaker 4 (47:19):
But here's the thing.
Speaker 8 (47:20):
Now, the We and the British, you know, through companies,
invested a lot to bring the oil out of the ground.
And one of the things that tends to happen in
a lot of countries that are not you know, the
United States and England and have Western traditions is they
will invite foreign investment to come in and help them
build their country up, and then as it gets built up,
they'll say, well, wait a minute, you got to go.
(47:42):
Because it's what happened in Mexico. We're going to take
this over, We're going to take that over, We're going
to take the other over.
Speaker 4 (47:47):
Now.
Speaker 8 (47:47):
I don't think that is any kind of commentary on
the you know, on how good or bad the people are.
But this is a tradition in a lot of foreign nations.
Now I can certainly understand a lot of them come
from and say hey, well, if this is so valuable,
why isn't more of that? Why is not more of
that benefiting me or otherwise? But that's also why you
(48:09):
need a free marketplace, because when you have the free market,
you can look over and say, okay, well, Bob's getting
rich off of oil. I'm going to find a way
getting rich by selling clothes to the people who are building,
you know, who were getting the oil out of the ground.
Or I'm going to get rich by selling them food.
And it's okay if he's rich, because you can get
rich too. But the problem being what ended up happening
(48:31):
was we ended up creating a bureaucracy which was an
unseen bureaucracy that had a lot of power, and it
was able to.
Speaker 4 (48:38):
Successfully do this elsewhere.
Speaker 8 (48:40):
It was only a matter of time because before they
were going to turn that around on us, which is
exactly what's been happening.
Speaker 6 (48:47):
And the coup. Apparently they were initially the United States
in Britain, or at least we the United States, were
going to take military action Britain opted for, you know,
basically an inside takeover. Truman rejected the idea. When Eisenhower
(49:08):
took over, he ordered the CIA to get on to
burrow in there and to take over from the inside.
The coup was led by an agent named Kermit Roosevelt,
who was the grandson of President Theodore Roosevelt. The CIA,
it says, where they depended on a They describe him
(49:31):
as a young, insecure Shaw to issue a decree dismissing
Mozadique as the prime minister. Kermit Roosevelt had help from
Norman Schwartzkoff's father, who was also Norman Schwartzkopf. Yeah, so
it's again it's what were things happening in a in
(49:52):
Iran that uh, you know that were the people being oppressed?
There were we going in on a mora lead quote
unquote justified mission to free the people. No, in this case,
it was about oil. It was right and simple. It
was just about money, which and then three hundred people
died in firefights, they say, on the streets of Tehran
(50:16):
when Mozadique was over overthrown, and then he was sentenced
to three years in prison followed by house arrest for life.
So it's like if you you're gone, Shaws in until
he's not right, it's.
Speaker 4 (50:32):
And they mismanaged that too.
Speaker 8 (50:33):
Yeah, that's the thing at the end of the day,
if there's anything that we as the United States should
be exporting, it was the positive things, and it should
be respecting contracts, free markets, individual liberty, limited government, help
people to understand why that's beneficial as opposed to we
(50:53):
just want to come over and get your oil, right,
and if you really really want to think back, it
is one of the things we hear a lot. And
this is where you get into real conspiracy theory.
Speaker 1 (51:04):
Villain.
Speaker 8 (51:04):
I'm happy to go there one day, which is that
it was the Rockefellers and otherwise who went back and said, hey,
how is it that we can charge more for a
naturally occurring substance oil, which is by making people think, well,
you know, there's only so much of it and you
can only get it in certain places, and so therefore
it's a fossil fuel. And I am a believer in
(51:27):
the Russians have said this and a few others that
oil is naturally occurring and it's something the Earth produces,
and therefore it shouldn't be all that expensive.
Speaker 6 (51:36):
Right, Yeah, that's the whole fossil fuel thing. You're right,
And that goes back to the commercials that we all
saw in the seventies. I think it was Sinclair. Who.
Next time you fill up your car, remember some dinosaur
gave his or her all for that tank of gas.
And we don't even know now that was it the dina. Hell,
(51:57):
we don't know if it's a dinosaur. Everything we been
taught is a lie. Everything I'm I'm convinced now, well,
you know what, to be fair, ninety nine point nine
percent of everything we've been taught is a lie. It's crazy, except.
Speaker 4 (52:14):
Kind of like when I say big Gretch's hot.
Speaker 1 (52:16):
Is that a lot?
Speaker 4 (52:17):
And now I'm kidding.
Speaker 8 (52:19):
What I what I do think, and I agree a
lot of it has been. But what I think the
real where the lies have come from is what we
accept without question as part of broad public discourse. Because
at the end of the day, and you know, part
of it and I try to read these books, you know,
got a lot of them here, A lot of us
(52:40):
and me included, get lazy in terms of what we're
willing to investigate and understand and ask people for opinions
and look at other sources. And that's why it can
be easy to say, oh my gosh, well oil is
made from dead dinosaurs.
Speaker 4 (52:53):
Well, there's only going to be so much of.
Speaker 8 (52:54):
It, So I'll pay four dollars a gallon the next
time it comes up, you know, as opposed to is real.
Speaker 4 (53:00):
How does that happen?
Speaker 6 (53:01):
Right? Right? Well, it's it's just it's easier. It's just
easier to just go along because at the end of
the day, it's exhausting to swim against the current. And
you know, we've all, each one of us only has
so much in energy reserves during the course of our day.
And when you're trying to go to work and you're
(53:21):
trying to get the kids to school, and you're trying
to get all that done, and chase big gretch who
continues to run faster and faster, it's it's rough. All right,
let's let's uh before my brain hurts, let's move on
to the Uh are we getting seriously, are we getting
more stimulus checks we could?
Speaker 4 (53:40):
Uh?
Speaker 8 (53:40):
So there's a proposal Senator Josh Holly from Missouri. He
has proposed a stimulus check that would use tariff revenue
to uh just go right to the American people. Now,
this is kind of interesting because one of the things
that I believe facilitates this is actually one of the
things you were complaining about when they were trying to
pass the one big Beautiful bill. See, they were not
(54:03):
able because the tariffs are not written into law, there
from executive executive orders that they were not allowed to
use that as saying well, this is revenue to the government,
so we're able to reduce taxes. But you know what
they could do is have a law that says we'll
take this money here and send it to you and me.
So he is proposed to do that. This has been
(54:25):
something that came up a little bit earlier this year,
but now it's starting to get more traction and that's
especially since Treasury Secretary Scott Bessant went on Fox Business
yesterday and said he expects the tariff revenue to be
in excess of three hundred billion dollars, and earlier reports
were saying that we had taken in one hundred billion.
So there is a very good possibility. And the best part.
(54:48):
This would not be money that is borrowed. This would
not be money that is taken from something else. This
is money that is taken directly from the tariffs and
sent to you and I.
Speaker 6 (54:59):
And people have said and to me, it smells like
just it's a way too and I think tariffs are smart,
but it's a way to convince anybody who may be
on the tariff fence. Oh, I like these tariffs. I
get a check, But why isn't that money going to
pay off the national debt? I mean, I know the answer,
(55:19):
but you know, what's the what's the what's the company
line from them as to why it's not going to
take care of that.
Speaker 8 (55:27):
Well, that's actually been one of the impediments to it,
because earlier, when they were talking about this as part
of the One Big Beautiful Bill, Speaker Johnson, Mike Johnson said,
you know what, we need to pay off the debt.
We need to pay it down. You know, paying it
off would be very difficult. So that was one of
the reasons to dismiss it earlier, and that's one of
the things I think will continue to be an issue here. However,
(55:49):
what also might get you change some of those minds
is to say, look, we have a relative, a very
very tight Republican majority in the House, and this is
a great way to remind people with you know, without
strictly putting the our logo, Republican logo on the check
of who gave it to them as the twenty twenty
six elections approach.
Speaker 6 (56:09):
Right right, I'm not I am not opposed to stimulus checks.
I just at some point, when do we say that
the national debt is it ever going to be zeroed out?
Speaker 4 (56:23):
Well, that's the thing. It could be. It very well
could be.
Speaker 8 (56:27):
I know that a lot of people say, oh no, no,
that would be impossible, and they'll come up with, you know,
miles and miles of equations to tell you why not.
But the reality is, if we the people, we the
American people, stop asking government for things, then we will
be able to do it. Why is that because the
majority of what ends up getting spent like at something
else we might talk about, being the Social Security, Ponzi scheme,
(56:49):
Meta scare, Medicaid, all of that. Oh my gosh, we
gotta have it because if I don't have this benefit,
I'm going to die in the streets like no, you're not,
You're not. You can actually pay for your own healthcare
if you weren't asking the government to always get involved
in it. So it is possible, but it's do the
people have the appetite for you know, I.
Speaker 6 (57:08):
Was the optics of I saw the was it the
bulldozer yesterday or the day before, going through the homeless
encampments in DC, and I thought, well, first of all,
they got the people. They weren't bulldozing with people in
those in those tents and in those little homeless encampments.
But I thought, is that is that good optics? Should
(57:31):
they have well? Should they have done that? I mean,
I can see where that kind of feeds the other side.
And so look how heartless and they are taking bulldozers
to these I mean, I'm all for it because the
stuff has to be cleaned up. But you know, in
the in real life, we're talking about marketing. That's what
everything boils down to. And is that good marketing?
Speaker 8 (57:53):
Well, I think it will certainly get some of the
bleeding hearts, and even conservative bleeding hearts say, oh my god,
that seems so mean. The reality is, because I've seen
this firsthand. The Democrats, Muriel Bowser her government in DC. Periodically,
what they do is they will put out signs probably
about a week a week and a half before and
say this area is going to be cleaned up, and
(58:14):
then they drive up with their garbage trucks and take
all that stuff and put it in the garbage truck
and drive away. So if anybody's saying, oh, well, gee,
Trump is mean he's taking their property away, well guess
what the Democrats do it, and they've been doing it
year after year after year. And then of course the
people will come back because they see those notices take
a lot of their stuff away, and you know what
(58:36):
they leave is what gets trashed, and then they come
right back. So where the optics difficult, I agree they were,
But the important thing to remember is this is no
different than what has been happening for a long time.
Now they're blaming us for it, but I'm glad it's happening. Frankly,
I'm glad it's happened.
Speaker 6 (58:53):
I agree it needs to happen. It needs to be
cleaned up. DC has been a crap hole for a
very long time. Some of those tents are going to
be hard to bowl those away because they are physically
attached to the concrete with did you see them at
the time when they you know, on the way to
Freedom Works, there were the tents and they had the
(59:15):
eyebolts in the concrete. So somebody had to come along
with a hammer drill actually drill into the concrete, set
those eyebolts in there with some sort of a cement,
and I'm wondering who, you know, who went along and
did that? Who?
Speaker 4 (59:31):
Who?
Speaker 10 (59:32):
Actually did you ever see that happening? I didn't see
that happening. But I'll tell you a funny story that
kind of goes with that. So I was with a
couple of friends and we had dinner at Union Station,
walking back toward the Freedom Work's office, and you know,
we were just saying goodbye to one of our friends,
are standing right by one of the tents, and.
Speaker 4 (59:53):
The tent on zips.
Speaker 8 (59:54):
The guy comes out and says, hey, can you guys
keep it down out there? And we looked at him like, dude,
you're living on the street and you've got a train
right next to you that runs every five minutes.
Speaker 4 (01:00:03):
What the heck?
Speaker 8 (01:00:05):
While a couple of weeks later, this same guy is
on the news because there were a couple of Georgetown
law students that got him and apparently his wife because
I guess he had a wife too, got them an apartment.
But what it proves, what that proves, and what you
said proves one thing that's really important, which is that
a lot of these people should not be living on
(01:00:25):
the street, and we shouldn't encourage them to so.
Speaker 4 (01:00:28):
Frankly, if you.
Speaker 8 (01:00:29):
Or I left our whatever on a public street, they
would come up and remove it and throw it in
the garbage can. One of them, I remember they had
a you know, like not life side, but a very
large stuffed giraffe. And somebody else had a popcorn machine
right outside the Freedom Work's office. If you or I
left our stuffed draft or popcorn machine out there, the
city would come and throw it away. If you are
(01:00:52):
not suffering from mental illness, they need to take your
stuff and throw it away, or you should get it
off the street. If you are suffering from an illness,
they can use some of the tax money they steal
and actually help you, as opposed to spending it on
more bureaucrat hiring another clap trap that they do.
Speaker 6 (01:01:10):
That it's so true, and it's so unfortunate that that
mental institutions were a mismanaged and be used as punishment
and used as political punishment for people that they wanted
to get out of the system. It's it's scary because
(01:01:31):
we could certainly use mental institutions back again, because there
are a lot of people out there on the streets
who are in fact mentally ill. And then the others,
like you said, they're just they're just they're lawbreakers, and
they choose to be out there. They choose to be
out there. They know, they figured out how to use
the system. They figured out how to get venues from
(01:01:51):
the government and how to get money and food and
everything else. And which is, you know, kudos to them
because that takes a little bit of investigating and they'd
be you got to be able to work this system
just right, and they've put in the time. And it's
a shame that there's a way that you can work
this system that those are some of the other problems
(01:02:11):
that have to be fixed are the you know, the
ways that people have found to basically rob our money
from us. So it's all, it's exactly, it's a big
vicious it's a big vicious circle. Speaking of vicious circles. Uh,
Karen Bass opened her pie hole the other day. Was
that yesterday that she was talking because.
Speaker 4 (01:02:32):
She it was yesterday, Yeah, it was.
Speaker 6 (01:02:35):
I want to get into that and uh, we will
do that here. I have to I have to make
a hole. Well we'll do that right coming up next
as a matter of fact. Here on the Daily Mojo,
use the hashtag what I learned today. But Daily Mojo
(01:02:55):
Missy thirteen says, I love what they're doing in DC.
I can't wait until they come all the major cities.
That's exactly how she said it. Over in the Daily
Mojo chat room, see Audrey and California cow Girl having
a little discussion. Fake Zoe says, I can use some
of that tariff money. I know right, I am not
(01:03:16):
opposed to getting a check by any stretch of the imagination.
Over on the AX see here DM, Republican redistribution of
wealth schemes are still redistribution of wealth schemes. Oh, no
doubt that was DM. I was thinking about you when
(01:03:36):
I said it. I've done and I asked that question
because why aren't we paying? The fact of the matter
is it is it's a shell game. The whole thing
is a shell game? Can it be? Will we ever?
Could we possibly get back to playing the game? What's
(01:04:01):
the word I'm looking for? Fairly? Yeah, I don't know,
but when not not? When you learn and I don't
want to say it's discouraging, but well, when you learn
that you even go back to like nineteen fifty three,
we were going into countries like Iran and taking out
people who were, in theory democratically elected. I mean, it's
the it's the system, it's the way the it's the
(01:04:23):
way the game has been played since the game was
set up, even going back to the you know, the
founders of the country. Let's bring Phil Phil Bell back
in our DC correspondent, the smartest man I know when
it comes to all of this, the man with the answers,
and I mean DM wants to he wants the he
(01:04:44):
wants people to play by the rules. I would. I mean,
that's great, is it? I agree?
Speaker 8 (01:04:51):
Look, people will play by the rules if we're willing
to do it. Because remember, at the end of the
day that everything comes down to us. And that's one
thing whenever I get upset about Oh man, I hate
the culture.
Speaker 6 (01:05:05):
I hate this.
Speaker 4 (01:05:05):
I hate that. At the end of the day, I say, well,
who's responsible for it?
Speaker 8 (01:05:09):
We are responsible for it because we have asked for
all of these things.
Speaker 4 (01:05:12):
And you go back all the way to the Roman Empire.
Speaker 8 (01:05:16):
One of the things in the Roman Empire, and this
is when they had emperors who you couldn't do anything about,
only a small number of people could actually take them
out if they really wanted to. And one of the
things they would always complain about the Roman citizens was
access to grain. Now, you would think living in ancient Rome,
where there was a lot more area that you could
farm and otherwise you probably wouldn't need to rely on
(01:05:38):
the government for access to grain. But that was one
of the things that they dealt with back then. So
that's why, again, we were given such a unique opportunity
when we received the United States, and we had this
opportunity to live the way that we chose, and we
have a charter, the constitution that restricts the government as
opposed to restricting us. So what do we do. We
(01:06:01):
then go, we invite the vampire in and say come
on in. No, no, no, I'm afraid I'm gonna die
if I don't have a card in my wallet that
says I'm entitled to medicare. Stop being stupid. If we
stop being stupid, then all of these redistribution schemes will decline.
It's as simple as that. But I agree with exactly
what he's saying is hundred percent right.
Speaker 6 (01:06:23):
Yeah, And look, I I would love and I've said
this more often than not. I would love it if
we lived in the I know it's a bit socialist,
the Star Trek universe of everybody gets along and everything
works great, and you know, every everything is fair. But
(01:06:47):
I don't see that happening anytime soon because it's it's
the Golden rule. People with the gold make the rules.
That means we can't see that we need to stop
railing against the the injustice is done. But you do
have to understand that that's the older you get, the
more you realize the Golden Rule is more than just
(01:07:09):
the Golden rule, sadly or now realistically.
Speaker 8 (01:07:14):
Now, let me say this, if we're living in the
Star Trek universe. First of all, I want to marry
Deanna Troy, even though the woman that plays her in
real life is a mega socialist, and you know that
she's always got a dress like on The Enterprise. All right,
you know we want the body suit, Yes, that's what
we want. And then I'm getting in my spaceship and
(01:07:38):
I'm going to hang out with the Ferengi because they've
got all the gold or the gold plus press latinum,
and it's more fun out there, right.
Speaker 6 (01:07:46):
Yeah, at least a FERENGI take advantage of the fun factor,
and I haven't stopped thinking about Jerry Ryan and yeah,
seven of nine. But the whole thing up there in
it was Chicago, right.
Speaker 4 (01:08:02):
Got us Barack Obama?
Speaker 6 (01:08:06):
Damn it? All right? Well I looked over and I
thought that was Barack Obama stearing me back on the
their screen, But no, it's Karen Bass. They look very similar.
Should I go ahead and play this cut from Karen? Yeah? Yeah,
all right, here we go. Karen Bass, Mayor of Los Angeles.
Speaker 7 (01:08:26):
Not believe that this just happened to be a coincident.
Speaker 4 (01:08:28):
There is no way this was a coincidence.
Speaker 13 (01:08:30):
This was widely publicized that the governor and many of
our other elected officials were having a press conference here
to talk about redistricting, and they decided they were going
to come and thumb their nose in front of the
governor's space. Why would you do that? That is unbelievably disrespectful.
It's a provocative act. They're talking about disorder in Los
(01:08:51):
Angeles and they are the source of the disorder in
Los Angeles right now. This is just completely unacceptable. This
is an administration, This is a Customs and Border Patrol.
Speaker 4 (01:09:02):
That has gone amuck. This absolutely has to stop.
Speaker 13 (01:09:06):
There was no danger here, there was no need to
detain anyone here, and there was certainly no need to
have a provocative accute right here where the governor is
having a pressman.
Speaker 6 (01:09:16):
All right, So she is saying that in response to
what it was an ice raid basically during the governor's
press conference. Is that what happened?
Speaker 4 (01:09:25):
Yeah, I wouldn't even call it a raid.
Speaker 8 (01:09:28):
The stories I've seen indicate that one person was arrested,
but one illegal alien. But they showed up outside of
the press conference while Gavin Newsom was going on and
blathering like an idiot, and she's angry. Now, I gotta know,
is she trying to say wherever they are doing something
(01:09:50):
that there should not be any kind of law enforcement.
Because if that's the case, I want to shadow Karen
Bass everywhere and never pay taxes. That's the thing I'll say. No,
you know, I'm at a press conference with Karen Bass.
You can't collect tax money from me or Gavin Newsom.
That's what we should all do. That is absolutely preposterous,
(01:10:10):
And it's just so funny that while they're doing dumb
stuff in California, which is kind of a regular currents.
They're all for real Linda apparently now. But this is
what happened, and it's hilarious.
Speaker 6 (01:10:24):
She is just such a cartoon. I mean, she's she's
an InCom. She's the definition of an income poop. She
does not know how to get out of her own way.
I go back to the when she bootscooed boogie out
of town just before the fires out there got real bad, which, ironically,
(01:10:45):
I think we'll get to it. Bowser did the same thing.
Bowser bounced when things are getting a little hot in DC.
But Bass when she's when she was on the flight
back from she Nairobi, Kenya, I think that's what she
yah broke out, Yeah, with some some state affair. But
(01:11:06):
when the reporter was trying, was asking her questions and
she wouldn't answer, and I thought, that is a dumb look.
I mean, say something you just look like. And if
you're not smart enough to realize that politics is about
photo ops and sound bites, then you really shouldn't, you know,
be in politics, because you have to. You have to
(01:11:28):
understand that if you're going to be especially the mayor
of LA and screw things up so badly, the way
that she has done. She is I really believe she's
low IQ do you yeah, I agree.
Speaker 8 (01:11:42):
And this is the fact, this is what you get
with generations and generations of DEI hires. You have a
lot of people who vote for some individuals because they're black,
because they're female, or because they're black female, in which case,
you know, you get you.
Speaker 4 (01:11:58):
Know, two for one.
Speaker 8 (01:12:00):
And this is why there never, ever, ever should have
been a lot of the media that went along with
the civil rights movement in trying to uphold certain people
as being wonderful or oppressed or otherwise because of the
color of their skin. Karen Bass is incredibly incompetent. She
should not have been elected to anything, much less to
run one of the largest cities in the United States
(01:12:21):
of America. And you see how she's running it, doing
an incredibly bad job. But the worst part is you
have so many people in Los Angeles who will probably
again vote for her because she is a black female Democrat,
because of those three and fail to even consider anything
else that's going on there and say the objective thing
of hey, wait a minute, what kind of a job
(01:12:43):
are you doing? And by the way, if I was
mayor of a major American city or even mayor of
my town. And I had the ability to have a
few minutes with the media to make some kind of
a statement. Why make such an aconite statement life that
she could have said anything, but that's what she did.
(01:13:04):
She should not be elected.
Speaker 6 (01:13:06):
It's it really is amazing, And I can't where was
I listening to the SoundBite of is this something you sent?
Or it was Trump talking about the permitting process for
the rebuilding of around a Pacific Palisades and the rest
of the homes that were destroyed in the fire. And
(01:13:29):
to his credit, they've got the As much as I
have a disdain for permits, but the federal permit process,
I guess the people have had no problem getting the
federal permits to rebuild where they're trying to rebuild their
homes out there. She came out and said, well, you
know what it's going to be. We're fast tracking it,
and we think we can get their permits within two years.
(01:13:52):
And then they're like, wait what, and she will I
think we can get it down to a year. It's
how in the how do you justify that, as you know,
these people are trying to rebuild their homes and you're
telling them, well, it's going to be a year before
we get around to giving you the piece of paper
that gives you the oki doki to rebuild. How do
(01:14:13):
they even look at themselves in the mirror that well.
Speaker 4 (01:14:17):
Remember me, remember when we were talking about John D.
Speaker 8 (01:14:23):
Rockefeller convincing everybody that oil was you know, dinosaur bones
and whatnot.
Speaker 4 (01:14:28):
So that was the scam they sold.
Speaker 8 (01:14:30):
The scam that governments sell, especially local governments, is that
they are watching out for our health and safety. And
so that's why we have a permitting process to start with.
And let's be honest, it's a massive grift every level.
They're collecting money, collecting money, collecting money, and imposing their will,
which gives them the ability to do what collect more
money and what we should do. And this is something
(01:14:52):
that should be a federal law in the constitution. Excuse me,
not a law, but in the constitution, is that every
repermit should be a shell issue. If you go up
and you say I want to permit, they should have
to give it to you now, I for you know,
as a sop to the people who are afraid that
somehow I will get a permit to oh I don't know,
(01:15:14):
you know, set up a nuclear plant right here in
the house, which I don't want to do. That they
could check for health and safety. I think that would
be a reasonable compromise. But they should have to issue
you the permit if you ask for it, And that
would take so much of the teeth out of what
they do without making everybody think that, you know, everybody
will have a.
Speaker 4 (01:15:33):
You know, in bedroom nuclear reactor.
Speaker 8 (01:15:35):
But this is exactly how they operate, and this is
how they maintain their power.
Speaker 6 (01:15:40):
And you have situations, ironically in California and in New York,
New York City, there's the big tower. I can't remember
what street it's on, but it's the tower that's leaning,
and it's it's lean severy you know which one I'm
talking about. There's a situations one in Yeah, I can't
(01:16:04):
remember the name of the building. There's one in Manhattan.
It's that's leaning in there. They don't know what to do. Uh.
And then you have the one in San Francisco where
it's not just leaning. Man, this thing is sunk fourteen inches.
It's leaning a foot. This has supposedly been this is
done after all of their permits were taken care of
(01:16:26):
and you know all the government crap that they had
to go through to build a thing, and it turns
out that, wow, those permits really didn't do anything to
make that building safe or make it not lean over
and fall. It's pretty tower. It's called one Seaport, thank you.
(01:16:47):
That's the one in Manhattan.
Speaker 4 (01:16:49):
Yeah, and just remember.
Speaker 8 (01:16:53):
Every disaster, every Ponzi scheme, every plane crash, you name it,
there or almost everyone right has happened with having permits issued,
licenses issued, inspections performed, and so on. And all they
ever do if something goes wrong is say, well.
Speaker 4 (01:17:13):
We need more money. What do you need more money for.
Speaker 8 (01:17:15):
Yeah, either you're good at what you do or you're not,
And more money is not going to make it better
unless you're unwilling to do your job until we continue
to pay and pay and pay, which means you're not
good at your job.
Speaker 4 (01:17:28):
That's it.
Speaker 6 (01:17:31):
Yeah, it's uh there, there's the one in Manhattan. I
don't I'm it may not be finished.
Speaker 7 (01:17:38):
No, they said it's a partially finished. It's supposed to
be a sixty story condominium, but they haven't finished it yet.
Speaker 6 (01:17:45):
Yeah, yeah, it's I can't tell if it's just my
eyes telling me it's leanings there. Therefore I see it leaning.
I know, I know it is leaning, but I'm not
sure it's leaning is drastic and I'm not drunk. Surprisingly,
but it looks uh, it looks like it's leaning even
more than I thought. But then in San Francisco it
is the well. They call it the Leaning Tower of
(01:18:08):
San Francisco. Can you and and one of the penthouses
just sold I think it was it was it was used.
I mean it was not for the first sale of
the penthouse, but it just sold for like nine million,
which was four million less than it was originally listed
(01:18:31):
for it. I'm thinking, oh, great, you saved four million dollars,
but you still spent nine million on a penthouse. That
must be fabulous to have that kind of money to go, eh.
You know, if it falls, it's just nine million. If
it falls over, it falls over. Eh.
Speaker 8 (01:18:51):
Now, I want to have that kind of money one day,
I and I snapped. Certainly, don't begrudge anybody who does.
But what I've always wondered is what do you get
for that? So if I had thirteen million dollars, let's
say I said I'm buying this penthouse like What does
it come with where I'm going to walk around and say, wow,
I spent thirteen million dollars, you know? Is it does
(01:19:12):
it come with U with attractive.
Speaker 4 (01:19:15):
Single women who are going to tell me how wonderful
I am hot and running on? Yeah, you know, maybe
maybe you're going to get me to thirteen million if that.
Speaker 8 (01:19:27):
But if it's just views, you know, I can go
up to the Empire State Building, look around, and then
go home.
Speaker 6 (01:19:33):
And that's what it is. It comes with a spectacular
view of San Francisco. In this case, it's the Millennium Tower.
And they have tried everything. I say everything, I guess
not technically everything, but they've tried a lot. To put
jacks under the thing. They've gone down two hundred and
fifty feet and put new steel and concrete pilings under
(01:19:58):
this thing, and it continues to lean. I mean, it's
just how do you do that? How? At some point,
I mean, there had to have been some sign during
the construction they were like, oh shit, this is not
good man. This is just every time we pour it, it
just keeps washing out. I just throw a piece of
(01:20:20):
plywoo over it. Nobody will notice. And then yeah, and
then there had to have been something along the way
that that people just went, eh, screw it, we'll just
keep building it.
Speaker 1 (01:20:32):
And and they.
Speaker 8 (01:20:33):
Got all in theory, yeah, and that's what your your
regulation and your permitting supposed to be for, because the
most reasonable sounding people say, well, look, I want somebody
to uh, you know, to check my work and so on.
So that's why we have the regulation now in all likelihood.
And I don't know, but just from what I've heard
about tunnel construction and whatnot, a lot of times you'll
(01:20:56):
just get some soil or bedrock, whatever it is, it's.
Speaker 4 (01:20:59):
Not capable of taking the weight that you're putting on it.
Speaker 8 (01:21:02):
So in theory, if the designers, the engineers, you know,
said okay, I think this will work, wouldn't one of
the regulators look over and say, well, I don't know
if you can put all that weight on this soil
in this area, because you know, we're intelligent and we
spent time and we've tested it and we know this,
so we can advise you not to do it.
Speaker 6 (01:21:20):
But they didn't, and that and that goes back to
it's all political, that's all. It is. All the the
permitting process, the forced intrusion of government in everything, in
in every business, in every private home, in everything is
(01:21:41):
it's nothing more than control because they can hold that
over you. Look at the woman here in uh in
Dallas who I think she would cut hair, and she
was the one who wouldn't shut her business down during
the RONA and they arrested her because you know they
they because as she would, didn't have a permit to
(01:22:01):
run it. So it's just about the control. I agree
there has to be. You know, you like you said,
you don't want to have somebody going in and building
homes out of cardboard, and you know, and and but
the fact of the matter is that still happens. If
you have to write exactly right, you you agree, if
you know how the game is played, you get in
(01:22:23):
there and you grease the right palms. When you're building
a neighborhood, you can slip all kinds of things. It
happens every day that this stuff is slid in and
no one knows about it until something starts to fail.
So it's if it's frustrating again when you know how
the system works and you see the people getting screwed
(01:22:45):
over it. But there's really I mean again I say,
there's nothing you can do. You can get involved, you
can get involved in your local government. You can make
a difference that way. But then I go back to
there's only so many hours in the.
Speaker 8 (01:22:57):
Day, right, And that's if I trust the free market,
which is all of us, way more than I do
a governmental entity or somebody claims to be a watchdog
or otherwise, Because I always ask the question this is
really important.
Speaker 4 (01:23:13):
Number one.
Speaker 8 (01:23:14):
What makes that person in government who is an inspector
or signs off on a permit or otherwise, what makes
him care about me anymore than the guy who's building
the house or serving the food or otherwise.
Speaker 4 (01:23:25):
Nothing. I don't know either one of them. I'm not
close to either one of them.
Speaker 8 (01:23:29):
They are probably not going to be able to pick
me out of a lineup otherwise, so I don't have
any more confidence than them. But what I do have
is the understanding that, hey, if the guy who was
trying to sell me something screws me, I can either
A not pay for it or b tell others not
to pay for it, and he stands to lose something,
as opposed to someone working for the government who can
(01:23:49):
just say, oh, well, we screwed up and then move right.
Speaker 4 (01:23:51):
Along and keep collecting a check.
Speaker 6 (01:23:54):
Yeah, it's it's it's take a breath. They need and
they need better drugs that we can buy right here
and now that will make us feel better about it.
That's the whole thing about the whole fentanyl. The issue
is it never which never made sense to me that
(01:24:16):
you know, the drug dealers are they're importing fentanyl. And
as the free market person, if you're out there selling drugs,
you don't want to kill your client tele because that's
really bad for repeat sales, which is why that whole
thing it's always I know there's something to it, but
it's always sounded just a little hinky to me. And
(01:24:39):
I actually I remember Limbaugh saying something about the fentanyl thing,
how because they've said, you know, if you get like
a little the size of the head of a pin,
you know it could it could kill a convention of
people if you flick that into the air. It's like
something a little sounds a little Overblowneah, maybe it's just me.
Speaker 8 (01:25:01):
Chances are we probably would have seen a large swath
of people get killed because you think about just moving
things around, and I don't mean drugs, but I mean
moving things around in general.
Speaker 4 (01:25:12):
You'd have, you know, whatever.
Speaker 8 (01:25:14):
They carried in bags, boxes, you name it, something breaks,
something falls over, you name it, It gets out there, gets
sucked into some kind of ventilation system. You know, there
would have been something like that. So I don't I
don't buy that either.
Speaker 6 (01:25:29):
Yeah, it's there's something again, something hinky. I don't know
what it is, can't put my finger on it, but
it just doesn't My spidy sense is tingling. And this
uh so Washington Examiner headline, Bowser leaves DC for family
commitment with district embroiled and faid. Do you know where
she went?
Speaker 4 (01:25:51):
Mark? Was it?
Speaker 8 (01:25:51):
Uh?
Speaker 6 (01:25:52):
It was?
Speaker 4 (01:25:52):
I think it's Nantucket.
Speaker 8 (01:25:53):
It's one of the either Nantucket or Martha's Vineyard, one
of the vacation spots for the wealthy and Taxachusetts Martha's Vineyard.
Speaker 6 (01:26:02):
She's up in Martha's vineyard. Who knew? That's weird?
Speaker 11 (01:26:05):
That?
Speaker 6 (01:26:06):
Yeah, Muriel Bowser would go to Martha's Vineyard. That's that's weird.
But that's where she goes.
Speaker 8 (01:26:15):
Now, I will give her credit because I've talked a
few people and I actually agree with this. I'll give
her credit for not being as ridiculous as the Karen
Basses Brandon Johnson's and Brandon Scott's of the world, because
if it had been somebody like them, you know, college
student Brandon Scott from yesterday, you know, it would be
nothing but whining and obstruction and so forth. And when
(01:26:37):
Trump said, hey, get rid of BLM Plaza, she got
rid of BLM Plaza.
Speaker 4 (01:26:43):
But I also say those.
Speaker 8 (01:26:44):
Are the most dangerous kind of Democrats because not only
they have no ideology, but they have absolutely no no
rules whatsoever.
Speaker 4 (01:26:51):
They'll just go whatever way they're pushed.
Speaker 8 (01:26:54):
But it is incredibly funny that Okay, the President has
said I am taking over your police force and I'm
going to deploy the National Guard all over the city
because you've been doing a bad job running it.
Speaker 4 (01:27:06):
And her response was okay, cool, see you later.
Speaker 7 (01:27:08):
By I mean, but yeah, except it just dropped. Just
now we got the notification that DC has now sued
the Trump administration for the unlawful federal takeover of DC.
Speaker 4 (01:27:24):
Yeah. Now, I don't know if that's her.
Speaker 8 (01:27:26):
It might be the Attorney General, because the Attorney General
has been outspoken against it, and that might be him.
Speaker 4 (01:27:33):
But the one thing that.
Speaker 6 (01:27:35):
Surely be she may actually be in favor of it,
because if you're Muriel Bowser, it's a giant pain in
the ass all of the crime going on. I mean,
you've got to hit if nothing else is just a
constant yammering in your ear from every bitching about the crime.
So she may not like where it's coming from, but
she appreciates, deep down inside the help and she, like
(01:27:58):
everybody else, she's just a puppet. So whoever's pulling on
the string, she may actually be in disagreement with. Whoever
is the whoever has their hand up her wazoo controlling
her movements. I mean that's yeah, that's within the realm
of possibilities too, right, that's.
Speaker 4 (01:28:15):
I think that's absolutely right.
Speaker 8 (01:28:18):
Yeah, because look, at the end of the day, she's
probably not going to get unelected over this because she
can always say, well, wait a minute, it was unfair
that Trump did it. Please reelect me, and they probably would,
so it's not going to hurt her. But she can
also go out and say, well, look, crime is down,
aren't I doing a great job?
Speaker 6 (01:28:36):
You know? And yeah, yeah, it's it's it's theater. At
the end of the day. It's a it's a lot
of a lot of theater, all right, what's happening in
the All American talk show over on the youtubees.
Speaker 8 (01:28:53):
So check out our episode from Tuesday. Not only did
we play a little bit from the Daily Mojo and
give the Daily.
Speaker 4 (01:28:59):
Mojo a shout out, but thank.
Speaker 8 (01:29:01):
You my buddy Eric Haggers, who I went to high
school with and he's part of the Drill Down podcast
with Peter Schweizer.
Speaker 4 (01:29:07):
He joined us for a few segments.
Speaker 8 (01:29:09):
Thankfully, he did not tell all of the stories about
my high school escapades, but he has a lot of
fun and definitely want to.
Speaker 4 (01:29:15):
Check it out.
Speaker 6 (01:29:17):
Excellent and then all things trains.
Speaker 8 (01:29:21):
So I just posted a couple of little new videos.
I got on the Executive Train yesterday. CSX Executive Train
posted some videos from on board. I did not try
to pose as the CEO yet, but it's definitely worth
checking out and doing a train show the next couple
of days out not far from the Daily Mojo studios
(01:29:42):
right here in Vienna, so over in Chantilly. So if
you're in northern Virginia the DC area, come to the
Dulles Expo Center ten am to four pm at the
train show. I'll be there broadcasting live.
Speaker 6 (01:29:54):
Very nice, all right, ladies, and gentlemen, it's Phil Bell,
DC correspondent, if all around nice guy and aficionado when
it comes to anything that has to do with anything political.
Smartest man, I know, smartest man, I know we will
have more of the looking here at what and that's
not what? That hold on? I think I have the
(01:30:14):
right button now I would have been if I had
hit that button, it would have You don't want to
know what happens when I hit that button. Sure, it's
just it's it's ugly and the cleanup on Aisle six
would have been tremendous. But there will be more of
the daily mojo now that I've got the right button next.
Speaker 5 (01:30:35):
Stupidity is not a competition, and the whole island will become.
Speaker 1 (01:30:40):
So unless you're a politician.
Speaker 2 (01:30:43):
Overly populated that it will tip of a capside.
Speaker 6 (01:30:51):
Quite the conversation happening over in the Rumble chat room.
Speaker 7 (01:30:58):
Look up the.
Speaker 6 (01:30:59):
Term tofud dregs. This is j Chris Cloud. I'm sure
I've ever seen that name in there before. Welcome. I
think uh. It's a Chinese term that refers to absolute
shit construction that is driven by fraud and corruption. It's
why we see those entire city blocks and multiple buildings.
(01:31:20):
It makes sense. I mean again, it's when you have
corrupt government. And what was the the Walled city of
which what I'm talking about, the walled city of I'm
going to think of it. It begins with a K,
the walled Koloun. Thank you, Methylene Blue. I did that
(01:31:46):
without any help, no prompting from the control room. It
all right there in the old noggin. I am impressed
with me today. You're welcome.
Speaker 7 (01:31:54):
Oh that's a crazy looking city. Holy cow.
Speaker 6 (01:31:57):
The yes, the Walled City of Kowloon is or was
it no longer exists. But it was a crazy kind
of a political I want to say city. It was
more of a city, it's a It was a crazy area.
(01:32:20):
I mean it was. And it goes back to the
politics and the policies of Japan and China and trying
to be the political influence of the different parties. It
was at one point the densest place on earth. The
overhead shots of this place were terrifying. You had talk
(01:32:45):
about no codes.
Speaker 7 (01:32:46):
I mean they said it was largely lawless.
Speaker 6 (01:32:50):
Oh big time huge because the cops wouldn't go in there,
I mean they would they wouldn't go in and and
look at it up on top you can see all
the antennas that were I mean, it was it was crazy.
Speaker 7 (01:33:04):
But yeah, look at city.
Speaker 6 (01:33:11):
Yeah it's and when you look up the history of
this place again, it's very specifically divined, defined geographically because
of the political boundaries of the time. And it began
as a fort and and people just they kept building.
They didn't. I mean, there's a nice little courtyard right
there in the middle where you got some sunlight. But
(01:33:34):
generally speaking, the hallways and the streets, any of their
worst streets were just pitch black. I mean, and can
you imagine the smell. The smell had to be dense
it is, and they tore it down. It was I
mean again, it was amazing. But that this is what
(01:33:57):
happened when people basically try to escape the oppression of
one government or another political organization. And it was it
was incredible. But Ewan Guru says, what about Oh, I
know what you mean. Ewan says, what about Bob blah
blah Bart.
Speaker 7 (01:34:17):
Love the bah blah blah.
Speaker 6 (01:34:20):
We need to get him back on. I did qualify
when I said Phil Bell is the smartest man I know.
When it comes to all things political, bob blah blah.
Speaker 7 (01:34:31):
Love the bah blah blah again.
Speaker 6 (01:34:35):
Long time, long time, you love him, long time, long time,
long long time. Smartest man, I know when it comes
to just overall just general doll stuff, just smart, just
wicked smart, wicked smart, and we need to get him
back in He was going to be on the program
a couple of weeks ago and ran into a little
(01:34:56):
conflict I mean, not between us, but it was it
was some conflicting stuff. And we'll get him back in
here because he smart guy. August fifteenth was also the
day one hundred and eleven years ago that we opened
up the Panama Canal. Oh wow, it's been a while,
(01:35:19):
been a long I know, right, think about they were
able to build the Panama Canal one hundred and when
I say eleven years ago, that's pretty amazing. And then
Jimmy Carter sold it for what a buck? Why did we?
Why did we do that? I mean, look, I'm not
(01:35:40):
an expert on real estate or commerce, but I think
it was worth more than a dollar, wasn't it. I
think it was. I'm pretty sure it was. And I
had forgotten about Michael Jackson. I mean I hadn't forgotten
about Michael Jackson. But in nineteen eighty five, on this day,
he bought the Beatles. You remember that, I do forty
(01:36:06):
seven and a half million dollars he paid for the
publishing rights to all the Beatles songs. Wow. Oh, it's
also so many things that this is just this is
like a watershed day in history CBS. CBS began the
first network TV news broadcast with you know who the
(01:36:27):
first anchor was.
Speaker 7 (01:36:29):
It wasn't Walter Cronckott, was it?
Speaker 6 (01:36:31):
Oh nope, he was the second.
Speaker 7 (01:36:34):
Huh, I don't remember who the first one?
Speaker 6 (01:36:36):
Douglas Edwards. Douglas I've wrote it right, I mean, has
he gone down the annals of history, the Annals of history,
the first first network news broadcast, all right into the
the tech sector if you will. Do you remember ever
(01:36:57):
having this watch? It was a Cassio. It was the
JG two hundred. I remember when digital watches came out like.
Speaker 7 (01:37:10):
This, Yeah, they were pretty the very first one catilator
on it. I mean it was it had a keyboard
on it. You remember the keyboard.
Speaker 6 (01:37:18):
Yeah, you had to use like a pen or a
pencil to punch. But it was awfully handy. Yeah, very handy.
But this one we're trying to figure out exactly what
that the thing he is and we finally figured it out.
If actually it's not asycle wheel, Nope, what is it?
And for if you're listening to the podcast, It is
(01:37:39):
a digital watch, a Cassio digital watch from the eighties
or actually nineties, I guess, and it has a little
module that attaches clicks into place on the left hand
side of the watch. Oh, it was technically it was
a haptic device. It was something uh, vibration booster. So
(01:38:04):
you could play video games on that watch or some
sort of a game and it would vibrate like if
you got hit by I don't know, the bullet or
the bomb or whatever it was, if you were because
you could play a game with somebody else who had
that same watch via an infrared link. This is nice.
(01:38:25):
This is thirty years ago, and it was a little
thing that would if you got hit kind of like
the battleship, it would vibrate on your wrist, had an
infrared TV remote built in, and if you had somebody
else with the watch, you could play games together. The
piece that goes in the side of vibration motor for gaming.
I don't know how much it was the JG two
(01:38:50):
hundred Cassio, but Cassio was kind of the They were
like the tech the name back in the day. Yeah,
if it had Cassio on it, the calculators they made,
the watches. Does Cassio still exist. I'm not sure that
they do. Cassio Uh yeah, I guess they do. It
(01:39:14):
was probably not the same company, right, Cassio Japanese Multinational
Electronics Manufacturing Corporation Tokyo Japan. Calculators, mobile phones, digital cameras
founded in forty six and in fifty seven they introduced
the first entirely compact electronic calculator. They also did the
(01:39:35):
one of the first digital cameras during the eighties and nineties.
I'll be durned. It was founded by cashioh Seysakujo in
nineteen forty six. Excuse me, that was the name. That
was the original name of a Cashio Seysakujo. The dude
(01:39:56):
who created it was today O Cashio to which ron
you should say gazoon type? Oh yes, okay, you're welcome.
And this was just leaked yesterday. Apple is working on
(01:40:17):
a studio display, still working on their studio display, the big,
the big TV. Yeah, the big They apparently they leaked
and wasn't an accident that they leaked this code. According
to mac Rumors, they discovered the code in question. The
studio displayed too, has a code name of JAY four seven,
(01:40:37):
and it's supposed to be it was. They've been working
on this for some time, the actual physical I guess
TV they just have not or it just hasn't come
to the forefront yet because things that Apple have not
been the same since Steve Jobs. We still don't know
(01:40:59):
what it's going to be out, but it's a twenty
In twenty twenty two. The studio display was a twenty
seven inch five K Retina display with a twelve megapixel
ultra wide camera, three microphones, and six speakers. This display
may come out in twenty six. In theory, it's it's
(01:41:22):
I miss I missed the good old days when Apple,
when Apple was actually doing some really good These days,
we have other companies like Google and I had heard
this and thank you for sending this this morning, Ron,
because Google may or may not soon be going the
(01:41:45):
way of Microsoft in the nineties. Because Google is doing
apparently things too well. They are beat well.
Speaker 7 (01:41:55):
They're a monopoly. I mean that's what they're looking that's
what they're being looked at as.
Speaker 6 (01:42:00):
Okay, are they? I mean they do things well when
you think of when you think of a search engine Google,
what right? Yeah? And I like the Chrome browser.
Speaker 7 (01:42:15):
And told them that they needed to to get rid
of the Chrome browser. Somebody is it the.
Speaker 6 (01:42:24):
SEC who told them? They who told them they get
need to get rid of it? Well, there is a uh,
there is an anti trust anti case. Uh. A US
judge has ruled that Google violated anti trust laws with
any illegal monopoly over online searches. I mean the problem
(01:42:48):
here is that do I who do you trust in
this case? Do you trust Google? Do you trust the
used the district court system in the United States? Who's
the good guy? I don't know. But they are saying
that Google holds any illegal monopoly over the Internet search
market and effectively blocks competitors from gaining market share. This
(01:43:12):
is what they said about Microsoft in the nineties, that
Microsoft held a monopoly in operating systems and that it's
what they did to AT and T in the seventies.
When was that seventies anyways? Raighties?
Speaker 7 (01:43:30):
Yeah, when they deregulated them and split them up into
all the bells.
Speaker 6 (01:43:34):
Yeah right, And of course that worked well.
Speaker 7 (01:43:36):
Because they came right back together.
Speaker 6 (01:43:38):
They sure did. So what exactly was it that they
did that the government system did to help us with
AT and T as last time I checked, they are
just as big as they ever were. Maybe they aren't
as big as they would have been had they stayed together.
But I don't know the good guy is I really don't.
(01:44:02):
I have no idea if it's if is Google doing
stuff that's wrong? I mean they the I like the
browser and I like the search engine if they both
work really really well. But it's one of the according
to tech Target, one of the uh one of what
(01:44:27):
do they call it, significant shifts in Internet search engines.
They say that this could lead to it. It could
be really upsetting the apple cart. And there has been
a company now it is Perplexity. Yeah.
Speaker 7 (01:44:41):
We talked about them a couple of weeks ago. Remember
I was telling you about the Perplexity Comet search engine. Yeah,
so this is Perplexity is going to make a bid
for it, or if they probably did.
Speaker 6 (01:44:53):
Yeah, thirty four and a half billion dollars for chrome
they have and they're for a for the browser. Perplexity
isn't even worth thirty four and a half billion? How
are they good?
Speaker 7 (01:45:05):
Questions?
Speaker 6 (01:45:07):
They've got some investors? Yeah, so who is really behind
the monopoly the antitrust suit against Google and Google Chrome?
Is it Perplexity? Did they start this whole ball rolling
(01:45:27):
down it?
Speaker 7 (01:45:27):
Because well, Perplexity is just one group who has bid
on it. There there are several other groups who have
bid on it.
Speaker 6 (01:45:34):
Yeah, are there? Yeah? It says this was an unsolicited
bid though yeah, I'm looking at the story, but they
haven't even asked for bids. These are unsolicited?
Speaker 7 (01:45:44):
Well, then then it says somebody else. It says several
other companies are interested in it. Maybe they just went
ahead and threw the bid out there, But there are
other companies that are interested in the Chrome browser.
Speaker 6 (01:45:57):
I'm sure a lot of I'm interested in the Chrome
browser two, but I don't think anyone else has placed
a bid.
Speaker 7 (01:46:08):
Says a bid for it?
Speaker 6 (01:46:09):
But right, I mean a lot of people are in yeah,
absolutely example interested, Sure they're interested. Everybody's interested in it.
But these guys have actually come out and made a
bid of thirty four and a half billion, even though
they're open.
Speaker 7 (01:46:21):
AI, Yahoo and a private equity firm have expressed interest
in Chrome, they haven't.
Speaker 6 (01:46:28):
Bid yet, right, So Perplexity said, here's thirty four and
a half billion dollars will give you for Chrome, which
shows you how much something like Google Chrome is worth.
How much are they making every year off Chrome?
Speaker 7 (01:46:43):
By the way, Perplexity is a three year old company,
and it says it's raised around one billion in funding
so far from investors, including in Nvidia, in Japan's soft bank.
Perplexity is valued at fourteen billion.
Speaker 6 (01:46:59):
Right, and they'll talk about it all for thirty four
and a half billion for it, right, So they're all.
But it does make you wonder who's behind the whole
edie trust suit against Google. It's say, it's certainly not
the government out there going, you know what, we don't
we don't want Google to have this. That's bad. That's
(01:47:22):
not good for the people. We the people they need
to have. They need to have competition in the search
engine market. They need competition out there in the That's
not no, that's not how it's worth. So who is
behind this, who's trying to bust them up? Makes one wonder,
doesn't it? Thirty four and a half billion unsolicited all
(01:47:46):
cash offer the if they signed the deal. Oh, this
is the same perplexity. I didn't realize this. They tried
to buy TikTok back in January. Did you know that? No,
I didn't. I had no idea if if Alphabet the
(01:48:07):
parent company of a Google, if they agree to it,
it would require financing above the eighteen. The numbers for
how much Perplexity is worth are all over the place.
One says fourteen, one says eighteen. What's a few billion
dollars amongst friends the it's a three year old startup.
(01:48:30):
It would give the company Perplexity is. It would give
the company access to more than three billion users worldwide.
For chrome three billion, you know if we had I
would take what a percent of that? If we could
(01:48:51):
just get one percentage of them to be you know
the audience, I'd be tasty, wouldn't it. Perplexity did not
tell us on Tuesday how it plans to fund the offer.
They're gonna steal, They're gonna they're gonna rob. They probably
rob Garter World. Hell, apparently you can rob Garter World
(01:49:12):
out there in la and and get away with it.
Because they still haven't caught them. Uh. Several funds have
said that they would finance a deal in full of
alphabetic sceps. How's this going to affect the rest of us?
It's it will because what Google really has not only
all the the users. I mean, it's nice to have
(01:49:35):
a bazillion users out there, but they have information on
all of us, buying habits, all all of it. That's
the that's what. That's why this is worth so much
to a perplexity and and AI in general. This is
(01:49:55):
a big It doesn't because it's not sexy. It doesn't
sound sexy. I mean, short of the Wow, that's a
lot of money. But it's like, yeah, but at the
end of the day, and how does it really how
does it really affect me? It means there will be
a different company that has all your information. And AI
(01:50:15):
in general, of course, is affecting all of us. We
just don't need one more hope, We need one more office.
Don't it sounds so much? This whole are better than orifice?
Or is it hope? What'd you call me?
Speaker 7 (01:50:32):
Make a hope?
Speaker 4 (01:50:36):
The Daily.
Speaker 11 (01:50:38):
Making bone and vile with bread and long and the
most eng.
Speaker 1 (01:50:51):
Site, the Daily Mojo.
Speaker 6 (01:51:11):
You know, half of old people are using AI. Half
of older Americans are using artificial intelligence? What are we
doing with it? As old people? What do you think that?
(01:51:31):
And see that when you look think of AI? What
do you think of do you think of like chat,
GPT and rock.
Speaker 7 (01:51:39):
Here's the thing though, if you do a search in
Google now, just a search, you're going to get an
AI response, the first.
Speaker 6 (01:51:47):
One that pops up there at the top. Yeah, but Alexa,
excuse me, Alexa order condoms? Yes? Do you how many
boxes are here at the motel? Just they stack that
out there on the porch. It's it's incredible. They'll they're
(01:52:08):
free in the lobby if you want to stop by.
But voice assistants are overwhelmingly more popular than text chatbots.
Half of them reported using half of the people in
the survey. Over fifty five percent of the people in
the survey have reported using a voice assistant within the
past year, compared to one in four who used a chatbot.
(01:52:32):
Independent living continues to be a major goal of older
Americans as they decide if they want to go into homes.
Nearly one in three older adults reported using AI powered
home security devices, including doorbells, outdoor cameras, and alarm systems.
Nearly all of those people, ninety six percent felt safer
using these AI powered home security devices. AI is here
(01:52:57):
to stay. There's no doubt about it. AI will end
up killing us. I mean, at least we know, at
least we've seen, thanks to the documentary terminator, how it's
going to happen. So then what it does happen? You
know what he can say, Well, didn't see that coming.
It was laid out for us. Yeah, you did, on
(01:53:19):
a timeline. They even told us. When survey results show
that older Americans are split on whether to trust the
content that was generated by AI, fifty four percent said
they trust AI, forty six percent said they don't. People
who trusted AI were more likely to have or to
(01:53:40):
have used some type of AI technology within the past
year and AI generated content. I love this further, AI
generated content can sometimes look correct but be inaccurate. Really,
being able to identify incorrect information from AI is important
(01:54:01):
for assessing weather or and how to use AI generated
search results. See, that's the thing that if you when
you do a Google search for something and it does
give you the AI response there at the top, what
does it say right underneath it? That no one ever
reads I don't remember AI can and does make mistakes,
(01:54:21):
be sure to check. It's like, yeah, this, it's like
the EULA agreements, every end user licensing agreement that you've
ever when you've installed software and click yes without reading it,
every one of them says, yeah, you're you're agreeing that
this software. It may or may not work. Good luck.
(01:54:44):
And then we get pissed off and it doesn't work.
We told you might not work, but you clicked yes anyway,
And again it's we've been told all of these things,
so we can hardly that we hardly have room to
complain when it's arts to eat us. More educated users
were more likely to say they felt confident that they
(01:55:06):
could spot inaccuracies. So we all collectively or most of
us think that, oh yeah, we'd be able to tell
because first it was the fingers, that it was the eyes.
Speaker 7 (01:55:21):
Now it's the text, and that's even getting.
Speaker 6 (01:55:23):
Now it's the text. But isn't that didn't we find
that they are actually doing that?
Speaker 7 (01:55:29):
Okay, now seems to be I'm going to tell you
the last uh what was that I watched yesterday? The
WI Files? The last episode has a ton of AI
generated video in it, But it's hard to tell. It's
hard to tell.
Speaker 6 (01:55:43):
Yeah, but why can you tell?
Speaker 7 (01:55:47):
I don't know. There's something about the video, the way
it's built.
Speaker 6 (01:55:53):
I don't know. It's too perfect. Yeah, it's too perfect.
I think that's at least that's what it looks like
to me, because generally speaking, video is not perfect. Far
from it. Older people who are not AI users get
(01:56:14):
support for Oh excuse me, how can older people who
are not AI users get support for learning more so
that they can make sure that they're making informed decisions.
That's a good question. They don't really have the answer.
But you know what's going to happen. It's going to
be the government. They will step in. Overall, and this
(01:56:37):
is according to the piece of Science Alert. Overall, our
finding support a show that AI can support healthy aging.
But overtrust and mistrust of AI could be addressed with
better training tools and policies to make risks more of
his don't depend on the government because I don't know
(01:57:02):
if you knew that or not, but they're not here
to help. Wait a minutes, let's go that right. There
is the end that is that is three hours It
went by. It felt more like to didn't it because
it was too the Daily modes Ron's not even paying
it's anything. Yep, that's three hours. That's that's crazy. For
the Friday, the fifteenth of August year of our large
(01:57:25):
twenty twenty five edition of The Daily Mojo. Here I
said I was gonna give away the shirt. I will
send me a text or send me a note on
the app. It's like a three X shirt in the
first time. Stamp that first note. I get you get it.
It's all yours. Just send me your address.
Speaker 7 (01:57:41):
By the way that we have him, we have a
friend of the show going under operation today, under an
operation today, so we want to say read them or
read good luck, God bless you. Hope everything goes well.
Speaker 6 (01:57:52):
Abs damn lutely, And in the meantime we'll find out
if anybody I learned the damn thing during the course
of the program. Wade Robertson, you're gonna have condems sent
to my office building. Yeah, yeah, what can I say?
Give her? Jodie won twenty one. AI is still artificial
and everyone wants it to correct. I think he means
(01:58:15):
wants it to be correct, right, Tara Doherty, have a
great weekend. Everybody hopefully it won't be so long until
I'm back to get right. Where have you been wandering
back in here thinking that everything's going to be fine
and we wouldn't notice your absence? Wisconsin, Jack Cole, I
know it's Ai because it's a beautiful woman giving me attention. Yes, yeah,
(01:58:37):
I can do it feel that way, doesn't it? Kathy
the Bergsa's time for the goodbyes. Don't frett my friends Monday.
We'll be here before you know it. Have a great
Isn't that the truth?
Speaker 10 (01:58:46):
Does it not.
Speaker 6 (01:58:47):
Seem like I mean, I know weekends are never long enough,
but does it not seem like they just fla bah
every day? I mean, it feels like it was just
Monday yesterday. I'm pretty sure we're turning one.
Speaker 7 (01:59:01):
Yeah, the quicker it goes by, I think.
Speaker 6 (01:59:03):
But even the youths of today are saying it's going
by more quickly. So I'm starting to think that the
time machine is being turned up. Toby Over in the
Daily Mojo chatroom says, are those old watches the equivalent
of virtual paintball? That's a thinking man's question right there.
Thank Zoe says Google doesn't have a lot of info
(01:59:24):
on me comparatively, which is it what porn hub depth.
Tadlay says, have a happy weekend, Zoe and Lap Remember
is going to be on the radio on Sunday with
EIGHTU a Peach, so don't forget. Don't miss that. And
Dev says Happy Friday, y'all have a fun two days
before Monday. Love and hugs as always. And Ron, Yes, Bradley,
(01:59:49):
I'm coming down into your room in just a second.
Bring it off, to get the shirt off. Let's go
all right for the rest of you, remember we have
people are staying together otherwise with Shirley hand separately, six
separate threads. We're just a stupid good night talk talk
so you are have a good weekend.
Speaker 5 (02:00:00):
Watch listen at the Dailymojo dot com