Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the Daily Mojo podcast. Unjustice your mojo.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
You are about to participate in a great adventure now.
Speaker 3 (00:12):
The age what sixty. He's just going to break back
radio with an attitude. This system that we love is broken.
Speaker 1 (00:23):
I know that, dude, not comply. Welcome to another two
hours of common sense.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
That liberty and justice for all is a myth and
euretic behavior.
Speaker 4 (00:34):
I want to, you can't, and when you do, you
wish you did.
Speaker 1 (00:37):
This is your Daily Mojo.
Speaker 3 (00:42):
The circle of life continues. Chicago fifty seven, who is
a gifted pony from pernial soul to her teenage daughter Angelina.
Chicago fifty seven a gun to the end of its
useful life as a I guess as a riding pony,
(01:03):
and so Pernil, who was Angelina's mother, decided to go
ahead and gift the horse to that zoo in Denmark
so it could be eaten by the lions. Oh misu
keepers have said they're hoping to mimic the natural food
chain of predators by feeding them smaller donated pets. Although
(01:24):
a pony is a pretty decent little meal, I would
imagine the lions and the tigers and the bears got
pretty excited about. That might sound very dramatic and bizarre
that you would feed your pet to the animals in
the zoo, said the I said Perneil, who is forty
four years old. She says, but they're going to They're
going to be put down anyway. And it's not like
they're alive when they're given to the predators, or are
(01:48):
they I thought they would be. Do we actually know
whether or not they put I mean, they tell us
they're going to put him down. But in the darkness
of night, do they just slip Chicago fifty seven into
the into the line enclosure good luck run? Chicago fifty
seven can run anymore because it's at the end of
(02:09):
its life. Does it just sit there and go?
Speaker 4 (02:11):
Well?
Speaker 5 (02:11):
Hell?
Speaker 3 (02:14):
The Alberg Zoo asked for donations of healthy animals that
need to be given away for various reasons. Uh. They
and it doesn't have to be again, a horse, It
doesn't have to be anything sizable. It can be a
guinea pig, It can be a rabbit, a chicken. They
will be gently euthanized before being used as a meal.
(02:35):
In zoos, we have a responsibility to imitate the natural
food chain of the animals. In terms of both animal
welfare and professional integrity too. I mean, if you're going
to be a zoo, horses will also be accepted and
euthanized and slaughtered by the zoo, with the owners eligible
for a tax deduction. Oh well, that's kind of nice.
(02:56):
Then I wonder how much you get for a horse.
Nothing goes to waste. We ensure the natural behavior and
nutrition well being of our predators. She said. Her daughter's
pony was donated after it was euthanized due to pain
from a long term health struggle back in twenty twenty.
Oh we do. Oh no, I for a second I
(03:16):
thought we had. Hang on, I'll share it with.
Speaker 4 (03:20):
The photograph of Chicago fifty seven.
Speaker 3 (03:26):
Let's see. I'm saying that didn't it didn't work out
the way I wanted it to. Let's see if this
does well. Nope, that's for whatever reason that does not
like that link and it is it is not going
to take that link. Let's see. Nope, so you don't
(03:49):
get to see a picture of what was actually Well,
maybe if I do it this way it'll work.
Speaker 4 (03:57):
I think you probably should refresh that. Maybe I'm drown
with that tab. Go to a different tab.
Speaker 3 (04:02):
I think that's what it is.
Speaker 4 (04:04):
I don't know why would it not show.
Speaker 3 (04:06):
I have no idea why it won't. This is that
it's the Google machine, who knows what it's got up
its sleeve. Let's see if I do it that.
Speaker 4 (04:14):
Nope, Oh that's actually great. A whole lot of words
in there. It looks like you're not posting a gues.
I know it's not putting the right copy. It's not
copy and tasting the right Uh.
Speaker 3 (04:25):
And uh. The the woman who gave the horse away,
she actually runs a small farm in Denmark that allows
kids with mental health issues. So she's got very nice
little business herself. It's just I know, it's the circle.
It just sounds weird.
Speaker 4 (04:43):
Stinky Bescuit says he has an annoying neighbor he could donate.
Speaker 3 (04:47):
Yeah, I mean, if we're gonna go to that, if
we're going to go to that end, why not why not?
Why not soil the green as people animals? I mean
predators lying would eat humans and have eaten humans. If
if and humans have interacted over there with why not
give them people? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (05:09):
But a guinea pig, man, come on, A guinea pig.
Speaker 3 (05:11):
Is like a hey, here's that it's here's a treat,
but a real person. I mean, why not give them
a person? And it's not like see how close is
uh Holland?
Speaker 4 (05:29):
Can you do it is suicide by animal?
Speaker 3 (05:34):
Oh? That would be right Denmark? How close is is
Denmark in Holland? Or is Denmark separate from Holland? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (05:42):
Geography?
Speaker 3 (05:42):
What you don't know? You so you don't know either,
I don't know. According to AI, Denmark is not Holland.
They share a lot of similarities though they're two separate countries.
Denmark is in Scandinavia. And don't you get all cocky?
O were there thinking, oh I knew Denmark wasn't Holland?
You did not?
Speaker 4 (06:03):
Yeah, but you got to get rid of the wooden
shoes before you toss them into the lion.
Speaker 3 (06:06):
Cage, which are called what are the wooden shoes calls?
Speaker 5 (06:10):
No?
Speaker 4 (06:11):
Oh okay?
Speaker 3 (06:14):
And when the workers zoom time, no, when the workers
would get when they were pissed off at the at
the machinery that tried to take over. You know a
little history. I'm glad you brought that up. A little
history lesson and if you I can hardly wait. If
you've never seen Star Trek six the Undiscovered Country. Sabo
(06:37):
was the name of the shoes, wooden shoes when the
workers were rebelling against the machinery that was taking over
against the workers there in Uh, they throw them. Hence no,
they threw the were they threw the shoes, the wooden
shoes into the machinery. Hence the word sobo sabotage. I'll
(06:57):
be damn, you're welcome.
Speaker 4 (07:00):
Did you learn that?
Speaker 3 (07:01):
Don't say you never everything I know I learned from
Star Trek. Here's the thing though, and so's it's the
zoo is in Holland. Holland and Denmark are very similar.
I mean most of us thought at the same place, right,
I mean windmills and wooden shoes and the little funny
(07:21):
hats that the women wear. Right and back in sixteen
seventy two, Johann DeWitt, no relation to Joyce DeWitt, was
the former Prime Minister of Holland. He and his brother
they they weren't is the word poppy is the word
(07:43):
I'm looking for? Popular? Probably not. They weren't popular with
the people, and the people were in This actually ties
into today because the people were pretty pissed off back
in the sixteen hundreds, late sixteen hundreds by fake news.
(08:05):
Fake news was taking over. The people were rebelling against
fake news. And long story short, the people of Holland.
Of Holland at that time were so mad that they
(08:27):
ended up hanging Johann DeWitt and his brother Cornelius outside
of the jail, hung them upside down, removed their organs
eight parts of their bodies, sold their fingers and tongues
as souvenirs. And this is the same period of time
in that part of the world that we were also
(08:51):
given the art of Rembrandt, so that I mean it's
humans are strange people. The attack on Johann and Cornea
A was fueled by a relentless flood of malicious propaganda
and forgeries claiming that brothers were corrupt, they were immoral
elitists who had conspired with enemies of the Dutch Republic.
(09:13):
Anonymous authors of the smear campaigns against both Yohan and
his brother Cornelius said that then they blamed all of
the bloodshed, the killing, the injuring, the crippling, the mutilated people,
they alleged or they blamed these brothers for all of
the violence that was happening, and during that period of time,
(09:35):
social media was pamphlets. They would drop, they would write
pamphlets and I guess distribute them through the US male.
According to one pamphlet, the violence was legitimate because the
ends justified the means. Beating to death is not a
sin in case it is practiced against a tyrant death
(09:56):
beat sick temper Tyrannus the sentiment e a quote frequently
attributed to Napoleon. He who saves his country does not
violate any law. I mean, I don't know if eating
your prime minister is really necessary, but it certainly made
(10:20):
a point, did it not. Johann was assaulted and stabbed
in an attempted assassination in June sixteen seventy two. He
resigned from his role as head of state two months later,
which would tend to do it. Cornelius's brother was then
arrested for treason. When Johann went to visit him in prison,
the guards and soldiers disappeared. This is starting to sound
(10:40):
like the Epstein situation. The guards and soldiers all disappeared,
and he conveniently positioned mob dragged the brothers into the street.
That's when they hung them upside down gutted them ate
their livers if they cook them or not? Did they
(11:03):
cook them or did they just like uh liver eating John's.
Speaker 4 (11:07):
In a town of vampires or what.
Speaker 3 (11:11):
Crowd mob mentality? I guess uh see? Did the did
the Dutch uh eat uh de wit liver uncooked? Because
that is when you get right down to it, Is
that really healthy? Of course A I will tell you
(11:34):
that it's an exaggeration and not supported by evidence. Uh.
But it doesn't say whether or not they ate them
by h after they cook them. No, liver is pretty
stringy livers, it's living. No, liver's not stringy.
Speaker 4 (11:53):
What is it?
Speaker 3 (11:54):
Liver is like rubbery livers. The it's a sponge and
it's not even rubbery. It's like eating a sponge. Have
you never had liver? Liver's nasty? I don't. I don't
know why you would. Why a person would want to
eat the It's like eating the oil filter off your car.
(12:14):
It's just the liver is nasty. The liver and onion.
My dad used to love liver and onions, and I've
had liver. I made the mistake once of eating it.
Was on the road and I went to it was
a sandwich shop I was in. I was a teenager.
I think anyway, I did not make the connection between
(12:34):
liver worst and liver. You'd think that I would have
been smarter because the word liver is in both of them.
But I didn't make the connection. And then when I
got the liver worst sandwich, I was like, man, this
tastes a lot like liver. It just and just regular,
and that's after it's been ground up. If you get
(12:56):
just a big slab of liver and you go and
bite into it just crushes it just says. It's like
eating imagine eating a sponge, a dried up sponge when
you when you bite into it just goes and collapse.
Oh it's foul. I don't understand. I guess, I guess.
Speaker 4 (13:15):
Why would you eat a gizzard?
Speaker 3 (13:17):
Why would you eat a liver? Why would you eat
the balls off a calf?
Speaker 4 (13:20):
Good point?
Speaker 3 (13:21):
If you're hungry, you'll eat anything.
Speaker 4 (13:23):
What does it?
Speaker 3 (13:23):
What do the gizzards do?
Speaker 4 (13:25):
I don't know. Isn't that the I don't know, isn't
that what they used to clean the food?
Speaker 3 (13:31):
Or it's got grit in their throat?
Speaker 6 (13:33):
Right?
Speaker 3 (13:33):
It doesn't it rattle around in there? And it's likes
what what is I'll look it up.
Speaker 4 (13:42):
I got you go ahead.
Speaker 3 (13:44):
A gizzard? Definition the gizzard? And they do? They look
like balls? What part of the chicken is the gizzard?
It's the muscular part of the chicken's digestive system, essentially
acting as its teeth. Huh. It's located between the crop
(14:05):
and the small intestine helps grind the food. So you
are right, as chickens don't have teeth to chew their food.
So it's it's it's like the the inner meshing, the
inner works of the of the chicken's digestive system.
Speaker 4 (14:19):
I will eat an oyster in a heartbeat, but I
can't fathom why would you eat an oyster though putting
a gizzard in my mouth?
Speaker 3 (14:26):
I don't know what is it about an oyster that
is appealing?
Speaker 4 (14:30):
Nothing?
Speaker 3 (14:30):
And would you eat an oyster with nothing on it?
I've done that before. Yeah, but would you like, no,
chew it?
Speaker 4 (14:37):
You're talking about right?
Speaker 1 (14:38):
Put it?
Speaker 3 (14:38):
Yeah? You know, because chocolate, you'll take that. You'll put
it in your mouth and do it, let it wash
it around, yeap, just let it all over your tongue.
But you wouldn't do that with an oyster. It's like
a lot.
Speaker 7 (14:59):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (14:59):
Yeah, So why is it that you think eating in
oysters that I know? I don't know, but you've done
but you do it, I do it, I've done it
to it. I have no idea why. Yeah, they say
it makes your horny as cargo.
Speaker 4 (15:14):
Have you ever had that cargo?
Speaker 3 (15:17):
Yeah, yes, yeah, yeah. I'm trying to remember.
Speaker 4 (15:20):
If you got to sop that in butter, buddy, it
comes out in butter, But it's.
Speaker 3 (15:25):
I'm trying to think of how or where I would.
Speaker 4 (15:27):
Have I think I don't know cargo with snails.
Speaker 3 (15:33):
What do you think they're stupid?
Speaker 4 (15:35):
Well?
Speaker 3 (15:35):
No, but there are some.
Speaker 4 (15:36):
People out there who don't know what cargo is.
Speaker 3 (15:40):
Right, the stupid ones. And I don't think there are
any of those listening right now.
Speaker 4 (15:44):
You just they're not stupid.
Speaker 3 (15:46):
Ron at the Daily Mojo he's the one who talk
down to you.
Speaker 4 (15:49):
People don't know what Klimori is.
Speaker 3 (15:53):
Ron at the Daily Mojo his email address.
Speaker 4 (15:57):
And let me know whether Brad thinks you're stupid or not.
Speaker 3 (16:00):
Well, I don't think they're stupid. I wasn't one to
try to explain to them Cargo was right. The stupid
people don't. But I don't think there's any of them listening.
Ron at the Daily Mojo, that's just lobster and right
ron bat Mommy says, lobster is trash fish, are they? Well,
they do their bottom dwellers, you know. Lobsters aren't great swimmers.
(16:27):
Everything about that. They don't. They just they drop right
to the bottom. They just yeah, they're trash crustacean. I've
cooked a ton of gizzards at KFC in high school. Well,
hold on, KFC doesn't do they You can't order gizzards
at KFC, or can you? Huh? So back to the
(16:53):
the the the ingestion of Johann and his brother Cornelius,
which is kind of weird because Cornelius got Eton as well,
or got not on William the third, who was the
(17:14):
king afterward. I believe he was suspected of being the
one that orchestrated that the hit on the on the
DeWitt brothers. It was never confirmed. The moral of the story,
they say, and this is according to the Conversation, who,
by the way, used this as an allegory for what's
(17:35):
happening now with with Trump. Of course, the moral of
the story, perhaps it is simply that in the time
of crisis, A campaign of disinformation can transform political opposition
and rebellion into assassination and worse, which I would say
they're pretty damn spot on on that one, because look
at all the Look at Butler, Pennsylvania, look at the
(18:00):
dude who it's amazing that we've forgotten this so quickly. Well,
some people have, others haven't. But the fact that the
man sitting in the White House today, the attempt on
his life probably unparalleled in modern times. I'm trying to
(18:21):
think of there if there has there been another president
or a presidential candidate in modern times who had more
attempts on his life. They tried to They tried to
get Reagan, but that was only what just once once
that I know of. Yah, I can't think of another
(18:42):
modern day president who had more assassination attempts on his life.
And that's just kind of swept out of the why
and why.
Speaker 4 (18:51):
What's why? Because like him, because he was portrayed by
one side to be a certain type of person. Therefore
they go after it.
Speaker 3 (19:03):
Hence the disinformation, manipulated public perception, and amplified popular anxiety
equals murderous rage. A golden age of prosperity under a
republic headed by oligarchs, ended with ritualized political violence and
the return of a monarch who promised to keep the
(19:23):
people safe. I love this. They say history doesn't repeat,
but it does rhyme. As Ever, the need to separate
fact from fiction remains an urgent task. Again, the words
of the left perpetrated, drawn on their forehead, thrown into
(19:49):
the rest of us. You people, you're just misinformation, that's
all you are. You get out there and you just
try to you tell us lies, which was exactly what
they are doing every day if you watch the mainstream media.
Coffee Cromoca says, people will eat anything if they're hungry enough.
Is that a metaphor? Is that an allegory? Is that
(20:14):
a what's the other? What's another big literary term allegory? Metaphor, simile, simile,
Yeah yeah yeah, survival trade, yeah yeah. But it could
also be related to journalism and information. It doesn't simply
(20:39):
have to be truly about food. It was the Dutch
who also had the whole the tulip thing. Remember the
remember the tulips, the value of tulips. Tulips were a
traded commodity back in Holland. You remember that, No, but
why what makes a tulip? They had perceived that's just it.
(21:03):
They had perceived value in gosh, what year was it
was that in the sixteen hundreds.
Speaker 4 (21:12):
Oh, you told about kind of like bitcoin perceived value.
Speaker 3 (21:16):
Pretty much seventeenth century Netherlands, which again it's Holland, same thing,
tulip mania.
Speaker 8 (21:26):
It was.
Speaker 3 (21:28):
People went ape shit crazy over tulips, and tulips became
they were like the the coin of the realm. It
was the seventeenth century from the the the highest per
capita income in the world. A second, yes, tulip Mania
was also part of the Dutch Golden Age, the same
(21:50):
time period when the what the hell was in the
water back then? They're eating people there and Rembrandt came
out of it at the same time and in tulips
contract prices for some of the bulbs of the recently
introduced and fashionable tulip, which who knew that that was?
(22:11):
I guess it had just been. They had just created
the tulip. I've reached extraordinary high levels. A major acceleration
began in sixteen thirty four and then collapsed three years later.
Generally considered to have been the first recorded speculative bubble
or asset bubble in history. Tulips and that you know
(22:32):
what that's called is called it a fantastic salesperson that
they were able to make, not as good as the
not as good as the crypto salespeople, because again, crypto
doesn't even exist except in a digital realm, except in
zeros and ones. That's all that crypto is. The term
(22:55):
tulip media is now often used metaphorically to refer to
any large economic bubble when a set prices deviate from
intrinsic values, which again we've all questioned, why is it
that crypto? That bitcoin? Which, if you are curious, right now,
the price of bitcoin stands at one hundred and thirteen thousand,
seven hundred and eight dollars and forty nine cents one
(23:19):
hundred and thirteen thousand dollars. For it won't even fit
in my hand because it it isn't if you unplug
the damn computer, it doesn't exist.
Speaker 4 (23:35):
It doesn't, that's right, it does not.
Speaker 3 (23:38):
Does a website exist? So yes, but sort of sort of,
I mean, can you get to it? A light bulb?
Speaker 4 (23:49):
Does it exist?
Speaker 3 (23:50):
Yes, a light bulb exists? Correct you can touch in
the physical realm. A website exists in the physical realm.
Speaker 4 (23:58):
Right, it does?
Speaker 3 (24:01):
Actually, yes, does bitcoin exist in the physical realm?
Speaker 4 (24:08):
I don't know. I don't know.
Speaker 3 (24:10):
How is that? Yeah, if a website exists in a
physical realm, and so does bitcoin.
Speaker 4 (24:16):
But bitcoin, isn't bitcoin spread out across multiple computers? I don't,
isn't it?
Speaker 3 (24:24):
Well, that's blockchain blockchain technology, which means that it's it's
a ledger. Going back to the old days of a
county when you had a ledger. Well you know about ledgers,
you or you're mister trunch, so you had a ledger.
But with bitcoin and blockchain technology, the the beauty of
(24:47):
blockchain is that you and everybody in the town that
you're living in has a ledger. So when I buy
a bitcoin, they everybody in the town goes, Brad owns
one bitcoin, and here's the number of the bitcoin that
Brad owns. So if you ever want to steal my bitcoin,
you're going to have to go to every stupid person.
(25:10):
Ron at the Dailymojo dot com. He's the one that
called you stupid for not knowing what it gives you.
And it's okay, it's it's well you did. But it's
all right, you said the Dailymojo dot com, right, the
stupid people that aren't listening, But the people that are
listening are very smart, especially that well that one except
for him. But you'd have to go to every you
(25:32):
have to knock on and bust into everybody's in that town.
Speaker 4 (25:37):
Off the ledger.
Speaker 3 (25:38):
No, No, to go in and change the ledger. You'd
have to go in and change the legend the entry.
To steal the bitcoin, you'd have to change every entry.
And that's blockchain, okay. Is that it's it's recorded in
so many places.
Speaker 4 (25:53):
So in that particular case, I would say the point
does not exist in the road, in the in the
physical realm, but websites do.
Speaker 3 (26:03):
Does the money on your paycheck exist in the physical realm?
Does the money on my paycheckings if you had, if
you had you had a paycheck, Misty would say, no,
the money him my paycheck. I agree. I mean, until
you hold a dollar. It's funny you ever go to
your wallet and go, I wonder how much and blow
(26:25):
out of it? This is.
Speaker 9 (26:30):
This is all.
Speaker 3 (26:33):
Can you show money on TV anymore? I mean you
weren't supposed to for a long time. Because it was counterfeiting, right,
it was illegal to show him. No way look it up, Well,
no way, what I didn't know that. Yeah, that's why
there's fake money in movies. Look, I have five one
dollar bill. That's it. That is the money that I
(26:53):
can tell you this exists in the physical realm. Other
than this, if the power went out and some change
in a jar. But if the power goes out, all
that money that's in the tacking account.
Speaker 4 (27:08):
That money that that paper right there is backed by something.
And if it's no longer backed by.
Speaker 3 (27:13):
That, that's just it. It's theory. In theory, it's backed
by the gold.
Speaker 4 (27:18):
And you could wp your butt within and.
Speaker 3 (27:23):
You look at Confederate money. Yeah, that's not worth the well,
actually ironically it is worth It is worth money now.
But that's all that's it right there. This is the
only physical money, and it really isn't worth anything because
there's not enough gold and fork Knox to back all
that up. John John says, lick the dollar bills and
(27:46):
auction them off.
Speaker 4 (27:49):
He would get the scabies or something licking those dollar bill.
You know, you don't know where those dollar bills have been.
Speaker 3 (27:57):
I get scabies by licking the dollar bills something you
might catch something. How can you scapies? You can't get
scabies from licking a dollar bill.
Speaker 4 (28:09):
You have no idea where that dollar dollar bill.
Speaker 3 (28:12):
Will give you scabies. Of course, a I is gonna say,
can licking a dollar bill give you scabies? While it's
unlikely you'd get scabies from licking a dollar bill? According
to the University of Utah, what the hell do they know?
Utah health money is covered with germs and it's recommended
(28:34):
to wash your hands after handling it. Scabies. Do you
even know what skabies are?
Speaker 1 (28:38):
Do not?
Speaker 4 (28:39):
It was just a bigger of speech, Brad, But news
I didn't you get to take it and run with it.
Speaker 3 (28:45):
It's oh, well, it's ironic that you mentioned skabies because
there is something in history that recently happened with scabies.
Speaker 4 (28:54):
Has a good segue to that. We could make a whole.
Speaker 3 (28:59):
Well, but he's gonna ask you if you wanted to mention,
you know, the the is day about the ishme that
you weren't gonna engine.
Speaker 4 (29:05):
No, I've got something here that we're gonna kind of
branch off into. I haven't put them on the website yet,
but we're gonna be talking about them. This is did
you want to is there? I'll put it on the
screen Mojo Laserpros dot com. So we've had people have
asked us about making these, these signs for house numbers.
So we've started making these. There are twelve inches by
(29:28):
nine inches house numbers that we do on uh, plastic
or acrylic.
Speaker 3 (29:34):
We can do so it's about the size of a
sheet of paper.
Speaker 4 (29:38):
Eleve them. Yeah, twelve y nine a little bit bigger
than a sheet of paper. But all right, if you
need a house number, we've got them for you.
Speaker 3 (29:44):
Now, is that is that lasered?
Speaker 4 (29:49):
It is lasered?
Speaker 3 (29:50):
How does it make it white?
Speaker 4 (29:52):
Well, interesting that you ask. If I turn this sideways,
then you'll see that it is black coated plastic and
I'm removing the black and it's white underneath. It's called
laserable plastic. And we're making these now at Mojo Laser Pros.
(30:16):
We can put your name, we can put whatever you
want across the bottom. We can put your house number there.
Speaker 3 (30:20):
It doesn't have to say Phillips, it does not. It
doesn't have to be eleven twenty four, it does not. Okay,
So don't anybody panic if you don't live at eleven
twenty four and your last name isn't Phillips.
Speaker 4 (30:30):
So these anything, these will be going on the site
either later today or tomorrow. But yeah, so that's that's
kind of where we're moving into. I'm having to work
around a few things just because I don't know. Did
I mention online that I that I least space for
the shop? I don't remember. Anyhow did you mention online
(30:51):
I mentioned on the show? How's that?
Speaker 9 (30:53):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (30:53):
Oh, I don't I think, I don't really think.
Speaker 4 (30:56):
I mentioned that we're going to be moving Mojo Lasers
and Romika Designs into its own place out of Mica Garage.
Speaker 3 (31:04):
Uh you did mention that you were coming out as
a Homo sapien.
Speaker 4 (31:07):
Yes, yeah, that Let's see what you did there.
Speaker 10 (31:11):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (31:11):
But yeah, we're gonna be moving pretty so keep So
we we've got a lot of stuff going on. Oh
something I started yesterday just as a matter of process.
We do a lot of awards, right and uh, you
know we we we do the the Clay Shooting Awards
for Timber and Beeam Workshop or Clay Shooting Awards dot com.
But we're also working on are you familiar with the
(31:34):
uh will Will Rogers Medallions. So there's a there's uh,
it's it's a Will Rogers. It's like a medal, and
apparently it's a it's a pretty big deal if you're
a if you're an author, a publisher, an illustrator of books,
(31:54):
Will Rogers Medallion, you're talking about that. Yeah, So I
am engraving those for a large, large organization that I
thought they were here, but I think they may be here.
But the presentation this year is in Oklahoma. But I've
(32:15):
got almost two hundred of those awards that I've been
engraving the back of with the name it's the name.
Speaker 3 (32:22):
Of the book, face and everything on them.
Speaker 4 (32:25):
Yeah. So that is the front of the award, and
that is a relief built into the medal. So I'd
flip over on the back and engrave all of the
winners information on the back. But it was O. W.
Speaker 3 (32:38):
Councle, not Roy Rogers, Will Rogers. Good grief, he did.
Uncle's the one who doesn't know what the hell gizzards
were shimni Christmas.
Speaker 4 (32:48):
But yeah, so it's exciting some of the things that
we're doing now. And I think I mentioned, oh I
did mention it because I mentioned going back to Laser
Shop live in the in the very near future.
Speaker 3 (33:00):
You mentioned it because the flooring in the new place,
have they no?
Speaker 4 (33:03):
As a matter of fact, floor up?
Speaker 9 (33:05):
No.
Speaker 4 (33:06):
I went by the old but by there yesterday. And
of course there's no electricity in there now.
Speaker 3 (33:11):
And that's going to make it hard to run the lasers,
isn't it.
Speaker 4 (33:15):
Well, I'm supposed to get electricity, but I can't get
electricity until I have a certificate of occupancy and I
can't get that until they're done with the floor.
Speaker 3 (33:24):
It's weird how the the government.
Speaker 4 (33:28):
It's been almost a month since I since since we
went over there to lease this space, and they still
haven't done anything with that floor. They don't know what
to do. They've had two flooring companies come in and
tell them, yeah, no, you're better off just scrapping that
whole floor and starting over.
Speaker 3 (33:42):
But why don't they do that?
Speaker 4 (33:44):
Because I don't think they want to spend the money
on it, or they can't one of the two. It's
a tile floor and uh so like ceramic tile, ceramic tile.
And they have a new maintenance guy who starts today
and they said they're going to send him in there
to work on it. Why the last maintenance guy couldn't
do jack ship with it? What do you what's he
gonna do?
Speaker 3 (34:02):
He's gonna quit, gonna go I quit.
Speaker 4 (34:06):
Yeah, So anyhow, I don't know when I'll get in there,
but it's a nice little spot in town. So anyhow,
it's a long way to make a hole.
Speaker 3 (34:20):
Yeah, but the hole is so worth it. So okay,
that's what they say radio. Yeah, it's grade. Stays here.
Let the fly expand put your feet on lock the
(34:47):
Daily Mojo. Thank you, thank you. It's good to be
a good to be here my age. Apparently you're not
going to get to see a damn thing that I
(35:08):
see today. I don't know why. And thank you Missy
thirteen for making this possible today because you mentioned Sue,
not Sue Chapman. What the hell was the anchor's name
in New York at WNBC for years and she just retired. Anyway,
Kate Merrill has been up there in Boston for decades
(35:30):
on the I think it's a WBZ and Kate Merrill
is a cute blonde chick and she I mean, and
if you go to like YouTube and look at all
of the stories that Kate Merrill has done. I mean,
(35:51):
here's one. Kate Merrill celebrates twenty years at WBZ in Boston.
Speaker 5 (35:58):
Are celebrating a very big milestone this morning. Today is
Kate's twentieth anniversary here at WBZ.
Speaker 4 (36:08):
Oh my god, I can't watch this video.
Speaker 3 (36:10):
She has been there forever. People in Boston love Kate Merrill.
They love her. This is a year ago that she
was there for twenty years.
Speaker 4 (36:23):
Happened Kate Merrill? What happened with Kate Merrill?
Speaker 9 (36:25):
What?
Speaker 3 (36:26):
Why? It's weird that you would ask, why would you
think anything happened with Kate Merrill?
Speaker 4 (36:30):
She did?
Speaker 3 (36:31):
You know why you'd say that?
Speaker 4 (36:32):
Did she celebrate too hard?
Speaker 3 (36:35):
She has lost her job because she's white? What a
year ago we were celebrating Kate Merrill being at WBZ
in Boston for twenty years. I mean, she's just the
cat's meow. She was the schniz and still is quite frankly.
I like Kate Merrill, but Paramount Global and CBS said,
(36:59):
I did realized Paramount Global owned CBS or did I?
I guess I did the whole sixty minutes thing. She
filed her complaint against CBS earlier this month, says she
was demoted and humiliated in front of colleagues, and eventually
pressured to resign all under the guise of CBS's DEI agenda.
(37:20):
According to the lawsuit, her troubles escalated when a black coworker.
It's always the blacks, isn't it. It's always the blacks.
I'm telling you, meteorologist Jason is it Michel Michael Michael
macal He made an allegedly sexually charged remark about her
on air, but faced no consequences. I could not find
(37:49):
I couldn't find the sexually charged remark. So I don't
if they scrubbed it or if he said, man, she
had a nice rack and I would love to. Let's
see if this will work. Nope, that's not gonna work.
What is it with the why? Why is it? I
(38:10):
can put it over here? I said, Uh, let's just
talk about yourself for a second. Hey, at least my
voice works, so stop your bitching.
Speaker 8 (38:22):
So she.
Speaker 3 (38:25):
Says that he made Oh it's back two years ago.
Almost two years ago, he made an inappropriate sexual innu
window hang on a second about her on the air,
and let me see if there's a.
Speaker 6 (38:43):
I want.
Speaker 4 (38:48):
What did he say?
Speaker 3 (38:49):
It's not funny because there are peoples, there are people's
uh jobs on the line here. This is not funny.
He made an inappropriate sexual innuendo about Miss Merrill on air. Specifically,
he implied that Miss Merrill and her co anchor had
sexual relations at a gazebo. Yeah, well, I mean, I'm
(39:16):
curious now, I have no idea the laws who says
he was not disciplined for his sexually charged remark. See,
you cannot you can't joke about shit anymore. And quite frankly,
I think I mean that literally because you can't. You
can't joke about human excrement on the air. His tone
(39:41):
was aggressive and unprofessional. Merrill immediately lodged a complaint with
wbz's human resources department, you know the people people. He faced, no,
no discipline. The complaint says that Merrill continued to support
him despite her disappointment. However, in April twenty four, she
(40:05):
privately texted him to correct a mispronunciation of the town conquered,
and Mikol allegedly loudly yelled at her on the studio floor.
So I don't know if he was trying to say
it was concord, and she says it's conquered. Now there's Concord, Massachusetts.
(40:26):
Is it conquered Massachusetts, Well, there's Concord, New Hampshire, but
it's conquered Massachusetts. I believe there's a There are two
different ways of just like Lancaster, there's Lancaster, there's Lancaster,
there's Lancaster, there's land scattered, there's lackluster. His tone was
(40:49):
aggressive and unprofessional after he yelled at her loudly on
the studio. It sounds to me like they don't get along.
Speaker 9 (40:59):
No.
Speaker 3 (41:00):
No, sounds to me like they may have a bit
of a problem. WBZ, CBS and Paramount took no action
to investigate Merrill's complaint about Michol's aggressive confrontation and threatening
treatment of her, nor did they investigate the previous complaints
lodged by Merrill's colleagues about Michol's sexually charged comment. Now,
(41:20):
I'm I really want to find that comment, says Michol,
says Merrill had sex in a zebo. Let's just see
if there's nothing in here. And he says suits for
(41:42):
four million. And by the way, she sued for four million,
because I mean it sounds funny. He alleged that they
had sex in a gazebo, And now I wanted because
how how many different ways could that be? Could that
(42:02):
be taken? Right? I mean, it's you you know, he
didn't just say well they were doing it in a gazebo.
They had they had to have said it he or
he had to have said it a different Okay, this
apparently nothing is Apparently nothing that my keyboard does over
(42:24):
here on this computer is being acceptable. Apparently my computer
keyboard is going to have to sue that computer because
my keyboard. I want you all to see, this is white. Yep,
there it is, And that monitor is black. You can't
see it, but it's black. Huh. I don't think I
(42:47):
really need to explain that any further than to say.
Speaker 4 (42:49):
That black monitor keeping the white keyboard down.
Speaker 3 (42:53):
Dude, it really is.
Speaker 9 (42:54):
Well.
Speaker 3 (42:55):
I think if the damn keyboard wasn't always telling the
black monitor what to do, maybe we don't get along
the list. I see if I can I see if
I get a monitor in sign. This is Phil Bell
on the Daily Mojo with you whatdding Updates.
Speaker 8 (43:09):
Normally on these morning updates, I like to talk about
current events and how insane the Democrats are.
Speaker 3 (43:14):
But today is a little bit different. You see.
Speaker 8 (43:17):
I know that out in this audience there have got
to be people just like me who get burnt out
and run down from the daily grind. And whenever I
get in that situation, I like to look for inspirational
stories to help me get back to normal and going
full throttle once again. And one of those stories comes
to us today from none other than President Donald J.
Speaker 3 (43:38):
Trump. Now, I want you to think about this for
a second.
Speaker 8 (43:41):
President Trump, Yes, he was born to a very wealthy
developer in New York City, But did you ever think
about that despite being born into wealth, he managed to
lose all of that fortune. In fact, in one of
his books, he talks about seeing a bum on the
street and realizing that bum had more than him because
(44:02):
he was in so much debt. But every time President
Trump was down, he managed to get out of it.
He looked for a new opportunity, he seized it, and
he pulled himself back up. And after doing that time
and time again in business, he decided to run for president.
And think back to twenty fifteen when he ran for president,
(44:24):
how many people counted him out. The Republican Party didn't
take him seriously, The Democrat Party didn't take him seriously.
Many Americans didn't take him seriously. But guess what he won,
beating Crooked Hillary, who was the odds on favorite to
become president.
Speaker 3 (44:37):
And thank the Lord, she never became president.
Speaker 8 (44:41):
After that, he led the American economy to one of
its greatest heights before losing. And yes I said losing
in quotation marks, because we all know he didn't actually
lose the twenty twenty election. But it didn't end there
After that, he was impeached for a second time. Then
later on he was arrested. He was called a convict
(45:04):
and a common criminal by so many on all of
the mainstream stations. Even many in the Republican Party for
whom he had saved wanted him gone. But guess what,
he ran for president again. And after doing that, they
tried to assassinate him, not once, not twice, but three times,
and he persevered. And now he is president of the
(45:25):
United States once again, and he is making America great again,
just like he promised. Now, look, many of us will say, well, Phil,
but you know what, I wasn't born rich, and you
know what, I'm not running for president of the United States.
But guess what, we can do the exact same thing
in all of our lives because this is America, and
(45:45):
here in America we have unlimited opportunity if only we
choose to seize it, just as President Trump has done.
So what I want you to do is leave a
comment under the show let us know if this helped you.
And what ill so I hope you'll do is download
the Daily Mojo smartphone app and enable notifications. That way
will be up to date on the latest craziness and
(46:07):
good stuff coming out of Washington, d C. And you'll
know how to share it with others. Stay sharp, stay strong,
and stay free right here on the Daily Mojo.
Speaker 10 (46:16):
Phil Bell's Morning Update is only on the Dailymojo dot com.
Speaker 9 (46:26):
Every day at the top of the simple.
Speaker 10 (46:32):
Fur from the Daily Mojo Bot, Daily Mojo, Daily Mojo Bun,
Daily Mojo Radio with an attitude.
Speaker 3 (47:05):
Well, I was going to try to send Missy thirteen
a text and ever look something up for me, But
since that doesn't seem to want to work either, Hey,
Missy thirteen, check the Kate Meryll thing for me, would you?
In the meantime, These are the texts that were sent
between Kate and mister Michel Jason Michel, I'm glad with
(47:27):
that pronunciation of his names. Oh yeah, we've got the
we've got the text because she sent to him. Texas says,
hey boo, see how the context heyboo for both conquered
(47:50):
Math and NW it's conquered, never concord, and he says,
that's what I said. No early, you said concord. It
was a while ago. Sorry, earlier, doubtful, but okay, wow. Cool.
Speaker 4 (48:05):
That's how I feel when you correct me on words
that you know that don't make a difference how you
say him.
Speaker 3 (48:14):
Well, you don't think that people in conquered New Hampshire
care about how they give in conquered New Hampshire.
Speaker 4 (48:20):
Ship about people in Nevada thinking it's Nevada.
Speaker 3 (48:24):
Either one it's correct the daily mojo that will work.
Speaker 4 (48:31):
New Orleans versus.
Speaker 3 (48:35):
It's see now you're getting racist.
Speaker 4 (48:37):
It's New Orleans.
Speaker 3 (48:39):
It's racist to suggest that Nolins should be said any
other way.
Speaker 4 (48:45):
I mean, I guess it did.
Speaker 3 (48:48):
Yeah, you probably should quit while you're ahead. And then
she sends another text to Terry in Weather says, I
tried to talk to him several times in person, and
he won't speak to me. He's rude and mean and
won't even look at me. I begged him to tell
me what I did, and he won't. I don't know.
I didn't do anything, and this is not okay with
me at this point. So she's in touch with the
(49:10):
people people, and Terry says, whoa what ifinork? Okay, I'll
call him after work today. Okay, I talked him off
his ledge. This is back in April. The three the
three of us will meet next week. Let me know
what works for you. Monday. Maybe tough because of the eclipse. Oh,
this must have been a must have been last year?
Speaker 10 (49:32):
Right?
Speaker 3 (49:32):
There was no eclipse this year? Was there? Anyway? Seriously?
What did I do? That is the rudest anyone has
ever been to me at work ever?
Speaker 6 (49:41):
Not.
Speaker 3 (49:41):
Kate and Jason's fighting right now. She texted him, I guess,
like how to pronounce conquered because he said it wrong.
He literally walks over and freaks out, laughing my ass off.
He's like, why do you only text me when I
do something wrong? Blah blah, Like it's so aggressive. She's like,
I'm trying to help. He's like, no, you're not bananas.
She sent me a screenshot of the text holy chinoakes.
(50:04):
He texted her, what did it say? I haven't asked
her yet. I texted in the moment, like what tofan arc.
When she told him how to pronounce it, he said,
I did pronounce it that way, and she said, no,
you didn't, and he wrote, doubtful. He sounds like heckelfish.
But she is now being blamed for what is called
microaggressions because again she's keyboard white and he is monitored black.
Speaker 4 (50:30):
I would have done the same thing he did, probably
and said, f off, what difference does it make?
Speaker 3 (50:38):
What cast does it make? All right? I think she
was just trying to help. But if you want to
be a dick to somebody who's trying to help, you
have that right.
Speaker 4 (50:44):
Yes, she wasn't trying to help. She was trying to
be a dick.
Speaker 3 (50:48):
It doesn't sound like it to me.
Speaker 4 (50:50):
Of course, she was correcting him.
Speaker 3 (50:52):
Why do you hate the white chick?
Speaker 4 (50:54):
How do we know she's hern ally? No, I'm just
trying to get on one side that's opposite of you,
just to see if I can get under your skin.
It works most of the.
Speaker 3 (51:03):
Time wrong at the daily mind. I don't have a
dog in the fight.
Speaker 4 (51:11):
You would if I said Nevada.
Speaker 3 (51:14):
Now, because I know what you're trying to do.
Speaker 4 (51:16):
Oh yeah, you do know what I'm trying to do.
Speaker 3 (51:19):
But I know that it's not Nevada or farther instead
of further, it's farthest and furthest whatever. Dude, it's okay.
If you want to be wrong, that's up to you.
The lawsuit file. The filed lawsuit included the screenshots of
the multiple of the multiple text exchanges between Merrill and
Michel and between Merrill and w Z Besy Weather execut
(51:43):
producer terry Ll E. Liason about mikel So he was
the the weather director. Another thread. See this, this goes deeper.
What is there about? There is something else, There's something
of This is just a symptom.
Speaker 4 (51:57):
He either declined in his vans yep, he either declined
or she did one of the two.
Speaker 3 (52:03):
And I didn't say spermed. I said spurned, spurned, ye spurned.
And Wade Robertson says, I'll show her something micro and aggressive.
But I don't. I don't.
Speaker 4 (52:18):
Lay off the testop's brother.
Speaker 3 (52:20):
I don't think right, Okay. He was just hired in
September of twenty three. She's been there for twenty sand,
doesn't it damn straight? It does, allegedly to replace a
white meteorologist who was let go despite having never been
(52:40):
warned about any performance deficiencies. According to the lawsuit, I
have not seen this guy. Have you seen what he
looks like? Does he look like a douche canoe?
Speaker 4 (52:50):
Does he look like a well that man can do? Yeah,
you can in most instance, In most instances.
Speaker 3 (53:00):
I'm you know what, I'm not gonna say anything. I'm
just going to put up a picture and y'all can decide.
Hang on a second, that one is nice and representative. Okay,
there is the meteorologist. You decide if he is a
(53:24):
douche canoe or not. Cause wait a scion, hold on,
I missed, hold on, take that down. I missed the
best or one of the best.
Speaker 4 (53:39):
Oh yeah, here we go. This, this does make a difference.
Speaker 3 (53:43):
This, this answers so many questions. Boom, ladies and gentlemen.
There you have it. I'm not gonna say he's being snippy,
but it certainly sounds to me like he's being snippy.
(54:04):
Mm hmm. And I don't believe anybody got spurned.
Speaker 4 (54:10):
Not between those two we were talking about and there.
Speaker 3 (54:13):
Would not be any spurning whatsoever.
Speaker 4 (54:19):
Wow, the story just took.
Speaker 9 (54:22):
It.
Speaker 4 (54:26):
It's just it's we knew there was something to this
though we need we did, and now.
Speaker 3 (54:30):
You know it's like, so all you see the pictures
go oh, okay, what are you implying. I'm not implying anything.
I don't have to imply anything because we all go
oh okay, gotcha. And because he's gay making a giant huh.
Speaker 4 (54:53):
The comments on rumble are great, Oh, he's.
Speaker 3 (55:00):
One of them. And it's not you know, it's this
is the South Park explanation. This is it's not because
you're homosexual. That has nothing to do with it. You're
just you're just a dick and and we we yes,
(55:23):
exactly dish or bun right, thank you? A crafting freak
says by fangs. Do you mean meat dish or a
bundle of sticks or a smoke yep, cigarette or a
smoke either way? I mean it's oh and this reminds me.
Have you seen the before? I because twenty just a
(55:45):
year ago, twenty years she was amazing. Kate Merrill was
she was the talk of the town. She was the schnizz.
She was it. She was beloved by everybody, and then
boy wonder here comes to town and suddenly she is
(56:05):
put out on the pavement like last week's.
Speaker 4 (56:08):
Apparently she doesn't lock the gates. I mean that's right?
Speaker 10 (56:13):
Is that?
Speaker 4 (56:13):
I mean, that's what I'm saying.
Speaker 3 (56:15):
No, I'm not saying that at all.
Speaker 4 (56:17):
I said. What I'm saying is is he shows up,
he has a husband, boyfriend, whatever, and she goes, No,
that's just not gonna that's not gonna work.
Speaker 3 (56:29):
So maybe she was trying her trying to imply No,
I don't think that she's No, I'm what I'm implying
is that somebody has a chip on their shoulder, and
I don't think it's Kate Merrill. You don't stay at
a station in for twenty years. I guess it's possible.
But because your your reputation as a douche canoe would
(56:51):
be well known about town.
Speaker 4 (56:54):
Was he at there? She says?
Speaker 3 (56:57):
He was? Right? What about him? Says DEI? I don't know?
Is there something about him that says DEI?
Speaker 4 (57:07):
I don't Isn't that what the headline said? Due to
DEI issues, that's why she got canned.
Speaker 3 (57:12):
Well, that's what her lawsuit says. Yeah, okay, that's what
her lawsuit says. The other part of this, no, there
is no way. How much do you think she makes?
Speaker 4 (57:30):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (57:31):
Probably, she's been there for twenty years. Boston is what?
How large a market? It's top ten? Let's see it is. Wow,
(57:54):
I'm surprised. Where do you think it is?
Speaker 8 (57:57):
Uh?
Speaker 4 (57:58):
Probably, I don't know, top I don't know. Probably eight.
Speaker 3 (58:02):
You looked that. I didn't.
Speaker 4 (58:03):
No, I didn't.
Speaker 3 (58:04):
I have no idea. You're guessing, honestly, you're guessing. Let
me see your fingers, Let me see your hands. Let
me see your hands. Show me your hands.
Speaker 4 (58:10):
Quick, I would say you eight are the eight's.
Speaker 3 (58:13):
On your left hand? What'd you get on your left hand?
Made you look? See he's being a dick to him,
just looking that. He was an asshole to him. Just
then he made him look at his hand. Ron at
the Dailymojo dot com, tell him you're not a puppet.
(58:35):
Tell tell him not.
Speaker 4 (58:38):
What where does Boston fall in the list? Ninth? No kidding?
Speaker 3 (58:49):
Okay, yeah, it's the Boston Manchester and that is how
you say Manchester. It's not Manchester. There's an R at
the end, and that does there's a Yeah. How do
you say the word w O r A c h
E s Worcestershire, bless your heart, Worcester, Orchestershire, Worcestershire, bless you,
(59:13):
bless your heart. Actually worship work. It's it's Worcestershire, sauce.
Speaker 4 (59:18):
Worse Worcestershire, Worcestershire.
Speaker 3 (59:21):
Worcestershire sauce. It's the place is w R c h
E s t e r which is Worcester, Worcester, Worcester, Worcester, Worcester.
You brung her you Worcester. Yeah, right, thank you, missy thirteen.
I got the cart a pack right. It's in the backyard,
(59:43):
not too far from the car. It's if you watch Jaws,
you'd know, uh w a twin kire. Oh back to that, Uh,
I don't know that. I believe it. It said she
made one hundred. I don't. I think she makes more
than that. She's surely twenty years you would think, so. Yeah,
(01:00:05):
but then again maybe, I mean, what is the basis
of like your four million?
Speaker 9 (01:00:18):
So?
Speaker 3 (01:00:19):
I mean it is like ten times your annual salary,
is it? Where'd you come up with the number four million?
I just have a I feel like she'd probably be.
Maybe maybe she didn't. Maybe she's been there for twenty years.
She was hired as an anchor in two thousand and four.
She stayed with the company until, according to this until
(01:00:39):
twenty twenty four. The two of her coworkers and station
management were defendants. Maybe she is.
Speaker 4 (01:00:50):
Maybe she thought she was irreplaceable proof No, yeah, bulletproof, irreplaceable.
Maybe when she hit twenty years she thought, well, you
know what, they can't fire me now.
Speaker 3 (01:01:01):
Maybe absolutely she could have been. Yeah, she could have
could have gotten a big head.
Speaker 4 (01:01:08):
Here. I'll get it, not from him.
Speaker 3 (01:01:16):
Yes. In response to her alleged action, she was demoted
in May of twenty four and sent She went from
being the anchor, the evening anchor, to working on weekend nights.
And you know that hurts. You know, you know that hurts.
(01:01:41):
The lawsuit goes on to call the demotion's career ending.
She ended up resigning in May of twenty four. Her
non compete clause kept her wow she she had. The
non compete kept her off the air until June of
this year. She he denies that any of her actions
(01:02:02):
were motivated by overt racism or unconscious bias. The bulk
of the lawsuit revolves around her relationship with Jason Michael,
the black meteorologist who was hired to work at the
station in twenty three. He replaced now going white meteorologist.
Lawsuit alleges the outgoing weatherman had been fired despite never
being given any warnings about his work performance, and that
(01:02:25):
happens a lot. That happens a lot. Freeby thirty eight says,
last night, I dreamt I was a smurf cooking pancakes
and arguing with Muslims. I wonder what was on that
pizza I ate last night. That's funny. You should mention
that because there is that is just that just on
(01:02:47):
my end?
Speaker 4 (01:02:47):
Or that is that is there?
Speaker 3 (01:02:49):
You go, thank weird, very strange. There was something about
pizza and dreams that I just saw this morning. And
I'm not saying that any form of CBD will do
anything about that. But it's good to be balanced, isn't it.
(01:03:11):
I mean, it's good to if you're going to be doing,
you know, things like are you a late night eater?
Speaker 4 (01:03:16):
Do you eat normally?
Speaker 3 (01:03:18):
No? You try to not eat after eight No.
Speaker 4 (01:03:22):
No supper time around my house or dinner time, whichever
side of the fence you're on is usually about five
five pm. So is it breakfast, lunch and dinner or breakfast,
dinner and supper.
Speaker 3 (01:03:37):
It's breakfast, lunch and dinner and fourth meal. We have
to have fourth meal. Okay, you don't know.
Speaker 4 (01:03:44):
We eat it five you know, eat about five five thirty.
Speaker 3 (01:03:47):
And that's the last meal of the day. It's the
last thing you ever eat.
Speaker 4 (01:03:51):
Sometimes sometimes before I go to bed, I'm starving.
Speaker 3 (01:03:55):
Because yeah, because that's fourth men go eat something. But
it's not very like cookies or cake something like that,
but it can affect how you.
Speaker 4 (01:04:06):
Usually peanut butter?
Speaker 3 (01:04:10):
Why why peanut butter?
Speaker 4 (01:04:12):
I don't know. I like peanut butter, sure I do too.
Speaker 3 (01:04:17):
I have no idea where you know what. Go to
a Getmojo CBD dot com and uh and get you
some if you are looking for a CBD source. I
had something. There was something I had in mind here
and I have no idea what the hell it was,
but I can tell you that they're a good company.
Speaker 10 (01:04:37):
They are.
Speaker 3 (01:04:38):
I'm tap dancing. Well, I try to remember what the
hell it was. Get Mojo CBD do I don't remember.
Getmojo CBD dot com is the website The promo code
is Daily Mojo. Thank you for all of the orders
that you guys have have put through.
Speaker 4 (01:04:54):
Yes, obviously.
Speaker 3 (01:04:56):
Yep, obviously working for you because you're ordering more. So
good for you, good for us, good for you, good
for them. It's better for all of us. Getmojo CBD
dot com. You're listening to the lunatic fringe of American.
Speaker 10 (01:05:13):
Radio, The Daily Mojo.
Speaker 3 (01:05:24):
This makes me laugh. Pizza is it? Pizza on? There
was just a study done and it turns out it did.
It does have a lot to do with cheese. If
you eat cheese before you go to bed, it's probably
giving you nightmares, which is kind of weird. I mean,
(01:05:46):
I don't and this is going to shock you, I know,
but if you have a if you have lactose intolerance, yes,
and then you eat cheese before you go to bed,
it's going to be worse. So don't if you have
if you are lactose intolerant, don't eat cheese before you
(01:06:08):
go to bed. That's that's our health tip from me
to you on on the Daily Mojo. Speaking of gay
were we, Jillian Michaels is going to sue Netflix may
have been on seturd we talked about her.
Speaker 4 (01:06:28):
We talked about her this week Monday. You may have
talked about her on Saturday, too, but we did. We
talked Wednesday.
Speaker 3 (01:06:36):
Wednesday. Money my poor brain.
Speaker 4 (01:06:42):
So why Netflix?
Speaker 3 (01:06:43):
So because they they they dissed her on Netflix. Did
you did you watch the documentary?
Speaker 9 (01:06:49):
No?
Speaker 4 (01:06:50):
Is that where it's at is on Netflix?
Speaker 6 (01:06:51):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (01:06:51):
No, I didn't much.
Speaker 3 (01:06:52):
It's uh, it's a good I think it's a good documentary. However,
The Biggest Loser is what we're talking She was glaringly
absent and I wondered why she was absent. They said
she declined to take part. I have a feeling it
went deeper than that. The dude the executive at Netflix,
(01:07:16):
Brandon Rigg. He was the executive who bought the documentary
for Netflix. He was also one of the head honchos
over at NBC during the last few seasons of The
Biggest Loser, so he knew exactly what was going on
behind the scenes at The Biggest Loser. So the one
of the big deals about the documentary were. One of
(01:07:38):
the things that they brought up that stood out to
me anyway, was the whole caffeine controversy that Jillian Michaels
gave her team caffeine pills. Oh booh, can't do that,
which I thought was why would they? Why would caffeine
pills not be allowed? But you can, you know, you
(01:08:01):
can drink three pots of coffee if you want to.
What's the difference? And I'm not really sure what the
difference is, And she says that caffeine was never against
the rules on the Biggest Loser. She says, she says,
(01:08:21):
as for her claims that she was sneaking contestants caffeine pills,
Jillian tells us that's bogus and she has the receipt.
She says she is sitting on numerous emails, several of
which she showed on an Instagram post yesterday, proving caffeine
was always approved on the show, just like ambient and
smokeless tobacco, which she says she personally refused to use
(01:08:45):
so they could. Uh, what do you call the little
packs of chew? Was it a name? I can't remember
the name of though, I mean it was.
Speaker 4 (01:08:55):
It's like it's a little pack again or whatever, but
it comes in packs.
Speaker 3 (01:09:00):
Copenhagen is nasty, yeah, but.
Speaker 4 (01:09:03):
But you do the little packets instead. Smokeless tobacco is
what they get.
Speaker 3 (01:09:08):
Yeah, but what's the what's it called zen? That's it?
Speaker 4 (01:09:11):
Oh? Zen zen packetson. Do they have caffeine in them?
Speaker 3 (01:09:14):
Yeah, No, they've got nicotine nicotine which which also helps
nicotine will will chill you out, uh refer to as
lip pillow or upper decky, upper decky. Okay, ok uh.
She says that it was never and and the the
(01:09:36):
pills that they show in this story over at t
m Z, let me let me see if I can,
just forgret, are not the same pills that she was
handing out. Apparently, Um, they're the stackers and I remember
these used to be you get these down at the
uh at the local hotstop. Let me see if this
(01:09:58):
is the this is just one of the stories over
at TMZ. They're there right there, I mean, seeing those
at the gas station numerous times. And what they're saying
was the the big deal was back in the day.
(01:10:19):
Do you remember is itn epadrine?
Speaker 4 (01:10:23):
Yep?
Speaker 3 (01:10:25):
Yeah, it was in miss hydroxy cut had it?
Speaker 4 (01:10:29):
Yeah, Misty, what was the name of the pills that
had the effidrine in them? She'll tell me in a second.
But we we used to take them. Yeah, they used
to be. You can get those down at the gas station. Uh,
and had pseudo efphidrine in it. And the reason is
it or a fedrin? Just I'm curious.
Speaker 3 (01:10:49):
Wait, hold on, I think now it makes a difference
how you pronounced conquered New Hampshire.
Speaker 4 (01:10:54):
No, didn't they take them? They took them off the
market because of that.
Speaker 3 (01:10:59):
Yes, yeah, because they took them off the market because
what were they using pseudo efandrine for making meth? Right exactly? However,
do you know what meth makers did after because that,
and that's why all of us who ever want to
go and get the stuff that works at the drug
store for sinus infections or colds, rather, uh, you have
(01:11:23):
to go and sign it, you know, sign on the
DOTT and they'll only give you three packages of it
because you know you might be out there making meth.
Which is ridiculous because as soon as they outlawed or
restricted the pseudoephandrine, meth makers came up with a different
way to make it, what's called a precursor. They came
(01:11:44):
up with a different way, in a less expensive way.
So they kept right on cooking literally the meth with
a and the rest of us are out here going,
oh shit, I gotta sign, but I can only have
three pay okay sign ridiculous. What the government does every
time they get involved in.
Speaker 4 (01:12:01):
The sonis pills. That's what it is, because I have
to get them for misty periodically. And and you're right,
they only give you a throat.
Speaker 3 (01:12:08):
To give you a bump. They give you a bump.
There is a It is a It affects your not
your pulse, your blood pressure, but it gives you a bump.
And that's why people like them, because they give you
that that lift that up. And especially if you're trying
to lose weight and you're out there and you're fat
(01:12:28):
and it's hot and you're trying to run and do
all that stuff. Yeah, you want to get you want
to have as much.
Speaker 4 (01:12:35):
Pseudo fed sign you, tab Afron all all of those products.
Now you have to show you.
Speaker 3 (01:12:40):
That's where pseudo fed got its name, pseudo effantrymo. So
it's just it's every time the damn government gets involved.
It don't get me started. But anyway, she is suing Netflix.
She's also talking about possibly. I don't know why she
would sue Bob Harper. It's kind of sad to me
(01:13:02):
that the I want them to be friends, don't you.
Speaker 4 (01:13:06):
Yeah, on the show they portrayed it.
Speaker 3 (01:13:10):
They they seem like it, but apparently they they weren't. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:13:18):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (01:13:19):
W Kunkle says, have to present your license to get
claret and d here in Virginia. It's it's every time
that happens. I get pissed every time, and Ewan Guru says, Yep,
I have to show my fake idea to get pseudo avenue,
thank you, which yep, don't blame you, I mean real
(01:13:42):
id exactly. It's so incredibly stupid, and it's just it's
it's just another example of every time the government gets involved,
they it completely up. And then that the the doctor
Robert Wuizenga, who was also featured in The Doctor Commitary Metabolo.
Speaker 4 (01:14:01):
That's what I couldn't think of. Remember it was a
diet pill, metabolife.
Speaker 8 (01:14:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:14:08):
I do remember that they had a fedrin or ephigrine
in them and and that they went away.
Speaker 8 (01:14:14):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (01:14:14):
But yeah, Dexa trim metabolife. People used to take.
Speaker 3 (01:14:19):
Dexa trim that you want to talk about some really
good diet pills back in the seventies. Uh, you used
to be able to get sparsome diet. Yes, that's exactly
what it was. It was, yeah, it is now it's
a They are called dextro amphetamines and they would be
(01:14:41):
prescribed to lose weight. And it was it was just
it was speed.
Speaker 4 (01:14:45):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:14:46):
And and I haven't looked to see what spurned or
not spurned what and not spermed either for crying out loud,
you people, what spur on the lawsuit to get rid
or to stop the writing of scripts for speed was
(01:15:08):
for dextra amphetamines because you know what every time you see, oh,
it was about people's health. It was people were having help.
Bull That is never what it's doing.
Speaker 4 (01:15:20):
It was creating like heart palpitations and stuff.
Speaker 3 (01:15:24):
That's what they want you to say. Think, do you
really when was the last time the government gave a
shit about whether or not you had heart palpitations? That'd
be never. Yeah. Again, the only thing they want to
make sure of is that you can sign your name
on the check when you have to send in your taxes.
But it was and you can still get pseudoephandrine if
(01:15:45):
you know where to get it, if you know what
I'm saying, and I think you do. But like that's
where the words, like the brand names like Dexatrim came
from because they had dextro and phetamines in them, and
then that, of course went away. Metabolife I'm trying to remember.
Speaker 4 (01:16:08):
Yeah, I think metabolize like an MLM thing.
Speaker 3 (01:16:10):
If I'm not, yes, they were, Yes, metabolife because they
still exist, it just doesn't have the good stuff in it. Yeah,
but there is a Yeah, there's a metabolife. I guess
that's the I guess that was the same thing. The
pills were made by metabolife or was it metabol LIGHTE
(01:16:34):
that were the pills metabolite pills. Okay, there was metabolite pills.
And let's see the typically contained ingredients that I thought
to influence metabolic process processes A seven keto, d H
E A.
Speaker 9 (01:16:53):
H.
Speaker 3 (01:16:54):
But what was the other metabolism boosters and therm pretty
much anything it's on the market these days that's out
there has been Well, they're trying to do the same
thing with kreative kradam kretom.
Speaker 9 (01:17:15):
Is.
Speaker 4 (01:17:16):
How what is that is that like a CBD type
of things?
Speaker 3 (01:17:20):
No, nothing to do with CBD. Creative kradam kretome is.
There's an alkaloid in a in a in a plant.
I want to say, it's grown in Asia, but it's
used for everything from pain relief.
Speaker 4 (01:17:39):
Does marijuana, yes, no, no, it has not.
Speaker 3 (01:17:42):
No, it's nothing to do with nothing, nothing at all,
completely different. But they are trying to regulate that as well.
And by regulate, I mean they're trying to take it
off the shelves. And again it's it's not the government
being out there are uh, you know, concerned about your
your health. It's the uh, the other industries, mainly the
(01:18:06):
alcohol industry.
Speaker 4 (01:18:07):
It's like, oh, it's pulling people away from Yeah, yep.
Speaker 3 (01:18:13):
So it's it's always something that they're trying to get
their greedy little paws into. But it'll be interesting to
see what happens with with Gillian's lawsuit. She's meeting again
seeing this is Yeah, so she's meeting apparently today and
we'll see if the lawsuit goes through. Wade Robertson to
(01:18:36):
Hell would take you that ship, though, got to do
it all natural exactly. Less of course you can get
the good stuff, in which case, do it with the
good stuff. But it's a small world. I bet you know,
oh you know, I haven't I feel like I have
ignored completely today and they would say the same thing,
(01:18:57):
but it's not true. I've been thinking about y'all over
in the Daily Mojo chat room. Do you remember the
aged diet pills in the eighties, Yes, the age that
lose weight the.
Speaker 4 (01:19:06):
Dude, the AIDS diet plan were chocolate.
Speaker 3 (01:19:11):
Yep, trust me. It was also spelled differently.
Speaker 4 (01:19:14):
Yeah, I'm mistakenly thought it was chocolate. I did when
I was young. Mom had some in the in the
in the pantry and I thought, oh, we got chocolate here,
so I hate them.
Speaker 3 (01:19:30):
And what happened.
Speaker 4 (01:19:32):
I don't remember what happened, but I remember getting scolded
because it's not chocolate. I'm like, it is.
Speaker 3 (01:19:39):
I don't know what they I don't know what they
had in them. But it was a y d S
and unfortunately, and it was a relatively new product and
it just happened.
Speaker 9 (01:19:53):
To be.
Speaker 3 (01:19:55):
Was it released at the same time or within a
couple of years of AIDS acquired immune deficiency syndrome.
Speaker 4 (01:20:00):
And I mean it was it was pre a it
was pre a ideas.
Speaker 3 (01:20:07):
It was right, but not by much.
Speaker 4 (01:20:09):
Just was in the seventies that thing.
Speaker 3 (01:20:12):
Uh yeah, but remember aid started in eighty two. Let's
see AYDS diet commercial because it was widely mocked because
well you'll see here in the second way, it was
widely mocked.
Speaker 4 (01:20:25):
Over the counter was overweight and looked terrible.
Speaker 3 (01:20:28):
But age helped me lose forty six pounds.
Speaker 4 (01:20:31):
The ads diatlane helped me lose twenty eight pounds.
Speaker 3 (01:20:35):
Age helps control your appetite, so you lose weight. Yet
age lets you taste, chew and enjoy, and the.
Speaker 10 (01:20:40):
Appetite supress and in age is not a stimulant.
Speaker 3 (01:20:44):
Age helped me to lose eighteen pounds, and it doesn't
contain anything to make connect to the question why take
diet pills when you can enjoy age? Age helps you
lose weight without making U jitterate.
Speaker 4 (01:20:56):
Look, don't you even put the word candy on the
damn box?
Speaker 3 (01:21:00):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:21:01):
What was in it?
Speaker 4 (01:21:03):
That's that's what I was.
Speaker 3 (01:21:04):
What was in it that made you? Uh, it made
you not eat?
Speaker 4 (01:21:09):
That's a good question.
Speaker 6 (01:21:10):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (01:21:10):
Fenyl propinolamine.
Speaker 3 (01:21:16):
Was initially again suppressing, and so it was a stimulant.
So I wonder if a phenal.
Speaker 4 (01:21:26):
It says the brand's association with the deadly disease a
I D s led to a significant drop in sales.
Speaker 3 (01:21:33):
Significant Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:21:34):
It a box of eight.
Speaker 3 (01:21:36):
Yeah, and especially because everybody who had AIDS at that time,
you drop, I mean a I d S where the
rockheads and came out, it looked like you'd be lost
all kinds of weight. So yeah, it was widely mocked.
Penyl proper what Ron said, stimulant medication was used as
(01:21:58):
a decongestant.
Speaker 4 (01:22:00):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:22:00):
Yeah, so all of these things that worked as a decongestant,
you know, also gave you that little bump, and it
was can't have that, can't have that. By the way,
Ppa is also used in veterinary medicine to treat urinary
incontinents in dogs and cats.
Speaker 4 (01:22:18):
Wow, that a no, that Ayds candy. You know when
it was created when nineteen forties, was it really yeh?
Speaker 3 (01:22:29):
Was it called? Was it called then?
Speaker 4 (01:22:31):
Yeah? It was called AIDS Reducing Plan candy?
Speaker 3 (01:22:35):
That rolls off the tongue. Let me have some more
of that age what did you what did you say
was age reducing plan candy? Can I have some of
that age reducing plan candy?
Speaker 4 (01:22:47):
Even Heady Lamar hawked it for him nineteen. It's Headley, Headley,
It's Headley.
Speaker 3 (01:22:53):
It says Heady at d y blazing saddles.
Speaker 4 (01:22:58):
Oh sorry, they.
Speaker 3 (01:23:02):
Make the character is going to be hetty Lamar and
they named him Headley to avoid the lawsuit. But hetty
Lamar sued them anyway and actually won.
Speaker 4 (01:23:11):
No drugs, no diet, not a moment's hunger, hey y
dys interesting.
Speaker 3 (01:23:18):
Aged due to risk of hemorrhagic stroke, Ppa was withdrawn
from many markets. According to Wikipedia. Sure I wonder though, like, uh,
prop and Emmeline want to lose weight? Listen to Heady
(01:23:39):
it's Headley.
Speaker 4 (01:23:42):
Yeah, aids candy. That was nineteen fifty two. That wow,
well that's what they when.
Speaker 3 (01:23:48):
Uh if you see interviews with Judy Garland, they were
given her diet pills. It was speed yeah back in
the day.
Speaker 4 (01:23:56):
Yeah, because they were making a speed grass off apparently.
Speaker 3 (01:23:59):
Mm hmm. Yeah they've been. They've been doing that in
the Hollywood forever. My age when I was twenty five,
when my thyroid stopped working, I didn't have HIV. THREEB
thirty eight says I had age when I was twenty
five twenty six, when my thyroid stopped working, I did
not have HIV there and there's question as to whether
HIV caused acquired immune deficiency syndrome. It's in It's in
(01:24:27):
the UH book JF RFK Junior's book, The Real Anthony Fauci.
If you really want some energy and you want to
try something that doesn't isn't full of stimulants and snizz,
try out the Rev seven over at mojomipillow dot com.
This stuff works. It worked for me anyway. UH. You
(01:24:49):
can find out if it works for you. It does
not work with a stimulant. It's not like caffeine and
stuff it and we did you just you know what.
I'm not going to go back into what BHB is,
but it's five GBHB, not the five G you're thinking
that have anything to do with the radio towers. Nothing
to do with the five G, although DARPA has something
to do with five G. Which why do you think
(01:25:12):
DARPA has anything to do with five G? It's a
good question, thank you. That's we'll look into that. But
go to mojomipillow dot com if you would like to
check out the Rev seven. It comes in three different
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all of them. There there and there's no sugar in them,
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(01:25:34):
So if you especially if you like sweet drinks, you
will love the Rev seven And you can get it
at mojomipillow dot com. The promo code I believe there
is Mojo five. Oh save a little bit of money
and get a little bit of energy. And who couldn't
use a little bit of energy? Am I right? Damn?
Straight mojo myipillow dot com the daily show making in
(01:26:04):
They keep it fun, inside news and feels. So what
you'd like to say? Hi to any government agency monitoring
this broadcast? Do you want to find the Dailymojo dot com?
(01:26:37):
I want to thank uh Deanna for sending this to
me over on the on the Facebook because and you
won't be able to see it, but you'll be able
to hear it. And I like this guy and just
uh listen to what he has to say. How long
is get you? Well, that's a different button. There we go.
(01:26:59):
I think, Okay, now i think I'm ready take two yo.
This is for all of my conspiracy theorists.
Speaker 9 (01:27:07):
I consider myself one of the number one conspiracy therapists
here in North of America. The conspiracy theories create new
conspiracies because the old ones keep coming true. So for
everybody that was out there talking about the Auchi wow
Chiese was connected to the five G towers, well, DARPA
just put out a study and that study came out
(01:27:27):
that the actual signals.
Speaker 3 (01:27:29):
And the frequency from the five G is attached to the.
Speaker 5 (01:27:31):
Nanobytes and the actual I think it was the graphene
oxide that was in the Fauci Wouchiese are connected and
that's how they're signifying the actual myro cardon is any.
Speaker 3 (01:27:44):
So there's a lot. There's a lot, as they say,
to unpack in there. You've got DARPA coming out with
a study regarding the Fauci Auci or the as we
like to refer to it here, and then the five
G towers and the five G signals that are out there.
My my first question was DARPA. Do you know what
(01:28:07):
DARPAS down stands for?
Speaker 4 (01:28:10):
Uh, it's defense. I used to know.
Speaker 3 (01:28:14):
I forgot Defense Advanced Research Project Agency, gotcha, So it's
it's it's about But I thought DARPA was just about
Like that's harp that's completely different. Yeah, Uh, what would
(01:28:35):
why would DARPA even be I don't know, getting involved
in things like nanotechnology and nanobots considered advanced research, I'm sure.
Speaker 8 (01:28:49):
But.
Speaker 3 (01:28:51):
Why for if it's just for uh defense, why would
they be interested in things like nanobots for health.
Speaker 4 (01:29:06):
Because nanobots supposedly can repair tissue.
Speaker 3 (01:29:11):
So it would be from a bat like a battlefield
standpoint of being able to help soldiers or whatever soldiers,
et cetera. So there was a This is pretty amazing
because this goes all the way back to twenty seventeen.
(01:29:34):
The nanobots that are made from algae and roaches and
beetles and dragonflies, which I'd like, Wow, that's kind of fascinating,
isn't it. Nanobots currently being used in humans to target
cancerous tumors can be remotely controlled with magnetic pulses or
(01:29:54):
or ultrasound after being injected into the bloodstream near the
targeted area, usually in oxygen depleted jones carrying some sort
of a drug payload. Remember this is twenty seventeen that
they're talking about. This stuff, not tiny little like computer chips,
(01:30:14):
but these are. But they were referring to these as
nanobots like algae, which I guess makes sense. It's a tiny,
living creature, but you can control it somehow with magnets.
Speaker 4 (01:30:29):
I mean, do you remember when when it was not
too long after the JAB came out, that people were
showing how magnets stuck to their injection site. You remember that?
Speaker 3 (01:30:42):
Yeah, I was that real?
Speaker 4 (01:30:48):
Who knows?
Speaker 3 (01:30:49):
I don't know. I don't know either.
Speaker 4 (01:30:52):
I went away pretty soon, so I don't know. I
don't I don't suppose it was real. But what people
were hard, we don't know for a long time.
Speaker 3 (01:30:58):
Yeah, I see what you did there. You mentioned harp.
You brought HARP into the conversation again, which is the
high atmosphere something research project, High high altitude atmospheric research project.
Is that right?
Speaker 4 (01:31:15):
Yeah? That's that sounds good.
Speaker 3 (01:31:17):
Yeah good, I'm rolling with that one. So these magnetic
magneto aero tactic bacteria nanobots that are nano robotic agents
capable of navigating through the bloodstream to administer a drug
with precision by specifically targeting the active cancerous cells of tumors.
(01:31:42):
These legions of nano robotic agents were actually composed of
more than one hundred million flagellated bacteria. Isn't that flagellated. No,
that's not with gas. Shoot, it's not, huh, and therefore
self propelled and loaded with drugs that are moved by
(01:32:04):
taking the most direct path between the drugs injection point
and the area of the body to cure. And they
have algae based nanobots another remote controlled, biodegradable cancer killing nanobot,
this time from spirillina algae with fluorescent and magnetic properties
(01:32:24):
for tracking and controlling it too remote parts of the body.
Isn't that fascinating? Again, this is twenty seventeen before well
before any of us knew about the RONA. I'm not
saying that the powers that be didn't know about the RONA,
(01:32:45):
but it does make one wonder, doesn't it. And then
they have the DNA based nanobots. Made of DNA, this
creation is capable of performing nanomechanical tasks such as finding, care, worrying,
and sorting molecular cargo like chemicals, by using their nucleotide arms,
(01:33:07):
hands and legs and feet to perform tasks and move around.
They're smart enough to work alongside other bots in the
same area without interfering with their tasks, and they could
be used to deliver medicines throughout the body, transport, gene
editing tools, or for other programmable therapeutics. It's no wonder
(01:33:31):
we weren't all freaking the hell out about the the
the fauci auci. We don't still have to worry about
saying the I mean, I.
Speaker 4 (01:33:44):
Don't think so. We're not on any platform that would
knock us off for that.
Speaker 3 (01:33:47):
Do we This easy for you to say? Yeah, but
I mean it's and these things. They have something else
called neural dust, they say, perhaps best described as a
fitbit for the nervous system. It's created from seams. What
does SEAMAS stand for cmos.
Speaker 4 (01:34:09):
Umm, I don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:34:11):
It's it's a it's a computer, it's a computer term. Yeah,
Ronald figured out, uh creator from SEMAS circuit.
Speaker 4 (01:34:22):
I didn't know this complementary metal oxide semiconductor.
Speaker 3 (01:34:27):
Is that the same thing as semas.
Speaker 4 (01:34:30):
Used in digital circuits?
Speaker 3 (01:34:31):
Yeah, yeah, okay, uh simas circuits and sensors. Neural dust
uses ultrasound to power a three millimeter wide and this
is I guess a mechanical and there's a picture of it.
I would love to show you, but I can't, like
as long as like in noseum when you finally do
(01:34:52):
kill an oseum and you get them on your finger.
About that big. It uses ultra sound of power three
milimeter white implant that can wirelessly track and transmit real
time data from nerves, organs, and muscles. Development of neural
dust took rise with funding from DARPA and a twenty
thirteen UC Berkeley paper titled neural Dust an Ultrasonic low
(01:35:18):
power Solution. It conceptualized a mature version of the technology
which could be used to create an implantable brain machine
interface with ultrasonic sensors that can stimulate specific brain areas.
Isn't that what neuralink does? Because it sounds like what
neuralink does. That is a computer brain interface.
Speaker 10 (01:35:42):
Is it not.
Speaker 3 (01:35:46):
Used in neural I wonder if that is? I wonder
if that is what they Yeah. Neural dust technology that
uses ultrasound for power and communicating with miniature implantable devices,
bring a potential solution for long term wireless neural interfaces.
It's a low power, miniaturized system that could be used
(01:36:07):
to record neural activity and potentially stimulate nerves or therapeutic processes.
While not directly part of neuralinks current technology, neural dust
shares the goal of enabling minimally invasive long term brain
computer interfaces.
Speaker 8 (01:36:28):
It was.
Speaker 3 (01:36:32):
Dwight de Eisenhower and I put this. I don't know
why I'm even typing that in there, because it's not
gonna work. I'm gonna have to type it over here. Sorry.
The US National Archives on the YouTube here we go.
(01:36:56):
The the account on YouTube, which I found very strange.
Here it is the National Archives YouTube channel, which is ours, right,
I mean, we the people own the National Archives, do
we not? Aren't they ours?
Speaker 4 (01:37:16):
Supposedly?
Speaker 3 (01:37:18):
Why are the comments turned off? And that kind of
weird that the comments on this?
Speaker 4 (01:37:24):
Doesn't the government turn off comments on a lot of
their videos, Like when we were trying to respond to
Hillary Clinton videos or something, or about Joe Biden videos
a while back, they turned them on.
Speaker 3 (01:37:34):
Yes, I yes, I don't agree with it, but yes,
I mean, especially when it comes to the now. I mean,
why would the National Archives. I'm sure there's some way
and people have found some way for it to be controversial,
but what is it about the National Archives it would
be controversial? I mean, it's the National Archives, for crying
(01:37:57):
out loud, and this was posted and you probably heard
a lot of this speech before, but it's fascinating and
within the context of why he made this speech and
some of these historians on exactly what it was he
(01:38:17):
was trying to convey with regard to things like DARPA
and all of this technology and are and again the
military industrial complex and here he goes in three.
Speaker 2 (01:38:30):
Times, I come to you with a message of leave
taking and farewell.
Speaker 3 (01:38:35):
Nineteen sixty speech did not get very much attention when a.
Speaker 4 (01:38:40):
Minute, Wow, that was weird, was slow slowed down, no playbacks,
nor now.
Speaker 3 (01:38:48):
That's weird.
Speaker 7 (01:38:50):
New present is coming to power as John Kennedy was.
The spotlight was not on Dwight Eisenhower.
Speaker 2 (01:38:58):
We have been compelled to create a permanent armainance industry
of vast proportions.
Speaker 4 (01:39:03):
There was a.
Speaker 3 (01:39:04):
Feeling, I'm sorry, you want to mention priests about what.
Speaker 4 (01:39:07):
No, we'll talk about it after you're done with this topic.
Oh well, okay, yeah, all right, it's a whole different topic.
Speaker 7 (01:39:16):
At the time that this must have been written by
some speech writer who just sneaked into the speech and the.
Speaker 2 (01:39:20):
Councils of government. We must guard against the acquisition of
unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military industrial Complex.
Speaker 6 (01:39:31):
Three months ago we got contacted by a family up
in Minnesota saying that we have documents from Malcolm Moose.
He was responsible in part for drafting the Military Industrial
compay s page.
Speaker 7 (01:39:47):
These new papers give us written evidence that this was
not just some caprice of Eisenhower's or something by some
speech writer.
Speaker 6 (01:39:54):
You see the evolution of his speech from May nineteen
fifty nine to our nineteen six and he wanted to give.
Speaker 7 (01:40:01):
This speech for a long time two years.
Speaker 2 (01:40:04):
Our military organization today bears little relation to that noon.
Of any of my predecessors in peacetime, or indeed by
the fighting men of World War Two or Korea.
Speaker 7 (01:40:16):
There was one person Dwight Eisenhower's life whom he really
confided almost everything too, and that was his brother Milton.
Speaker 6 (01:40:23):
He is one particular document where the speechwriters had already
drafted their version of his speech, only to see Milton
come along and totally revamp had already been been written.
Speaker 7 (01:40:38):
When Milton Eisenhower was taking notes and writing things on
the drafts of these speeches, the speech writers knew that
wasn't Milton talking.
Speaker 3 (01:40:46):
It was like the potential for.
Speaker 2 (01:40:48):
The disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.
Speaker 7 (01:40:53):
He would see magazines with advertisements for some new warplane
or some bomb, and he got so angry, you take
the magazine and throw it into the fireplace of the
Oval office. Because he felt that defense bending should not
be something that would be encouraged by companies who are
seeking commercial game.
Speaker 3 (01:41:11):
That is a fascinating wow. I've never really thought about
that before. But that's I mean, because you see now
the commercials for ilacke Martin and Rockwell and all of those,
and it's Eisenhower was right. I mean, those are We
are a capitalist country, and I get it, it's a
capitalist society, but when it comes to the military industrial complex,
(01:41:35):
when you incentivize, yeah, war is good for money, dude,
I mean it is good for business. War is good
for business. Yeah, absolutely, And that's the thing about it.
And that's where we find ourselves now again going back
to DARPA, because it was being it was the defense
(01:41:57):
industry and the rece church that they're doing to make money.
And then is this the intersection that we found ourselves
at in twenty twenty with all of these technologies and
the healthcare industry, which when we were talking yesterday, with
Dan Andros about you know, the insurance industry and how
(01:42:18):
it's become so phinorked that you know you can't it's
a you can't afford insurance and be even when you
have insurance, the prices are of everything that are related
to Yeah, so it's it's like this, what do you
call it? The ora boros, the snake that's eating its tail,
(01:42:40):
consuming itself. It's what we're all in the middle of.
It's crazy. The whole thing is is nuts. Original Babsis
got this hundred times the Bible. Do not fear how
enemy gets people do everything. Fear too many, too many,
too many lukewarm people, warmongers who have been able to
win a war, warmongers who haven't been able to win
(01:43:03):
a war since World War Two. And I was just
this morning talking to the Bath of Knot about how
the older you get, the more you realize war had.
When when has war worked?
Speaker 4 (01:43:13):
Well, it depends on what you won't need it to
work for again. War is good for business, Yeah, yes, exactly.
I mean you think about the uh you give. You
give a president of wartime powers, man, they can do
a whole lot of stuff during quote war time that
they can't do normal.
Speaker 3 (01:43:34):
Peace isn't necessarily freebe thirty eight said piece is good
for business, It really isn't. That's the ironic thing about it.
It's when you have things like uh, prepared with mojo,
with emergency food. Yeah, it's a good idea to be prepared.
Speaker 4 (01:43:55):
And I'm not but what people food.
Speaker 3 (01:43:59):
But that's just it is the because there's always going
to be a dick out there screwing up the system.
I mean, there's always going to be somebody out there
that is that is stirring the pot, and that's what
keeps everybody riled up.
Speaker 4 (01:44:15):
But the previous the previous administration, the four years prior
to this one, that kept everybody riled up because we
thought that we were going to end up losing everything
we had, so people started, you know, banking their food
and all this other stuff. At the same time we banged.
Speaker 3 (01:44:34):
We had we had emergency food supplies though going back,
oh no, no, and in fifteen years, yeah, and we
have for years and yeah, and our grand and our
grandparents had sellers full of emergency food. We just didn't
buy it from a company. Now that we've all you know,
lost the ability or lost or really just The first
time I ever remembering food.
Speaker 4 (01:44:55):
Any of that kind of stuff like that in my
life was Y two K because that was what everything
was going to break.
Speaker 3 (01:45:06):
Yeah, and weirdly it didn't. Weirdly, Wade Robertson says, if
we really wanted to win wars, we would do it
really quick and absolutely smash them out. Yes, but that's
not the way wars are fought. And going back to
uh A desert storm, what was the one right after
the Iraqi freedom is that after two thousand I don't remember.
(01:45:30):
It's the one where they started making all of our
soldiers go down the list of what you had to
do before you pull the trigger. And I don't remember
what the name, I don't remember the marketing name of
the war at that time, but yeah, that was when
you start making your soldiers go down the list of
I've got to check this off, this, off this, and
then I can shoot. Yeah, that's when you're screwed. That's
(01:45:53):
when it just absolutely does not work. And that's what
they've done. They've tied the hands of of our soldiers
when they do that, and then we have to make
another hole. But good time to say prepare with mojo
five oh dot com because there's always going to be
a dick out there screwing things up. Mark my words.
(01:46:13):
Prepare with Mojo five oh dot com.
Speaker 1 (01:46:19):
Where political correctness comes to die the daily Mojo.
Speaker 3 (01:46:41):
Until I've read a race this morning, Wisconsin, jack hole.
If I need to stimulate my brain, I'm just going
to look at boobies forget nanotech. Right. Yeah, if you
want total security, go to prison. There you're fed your clothes,
you're given medical care, and so on. The only thing
lacking is freedom.
Speaker 4 (01:47:02):
In all cases.
Speaker 3 (01:47:08):
True. No, you're absolutely right dmxdm if Ron calls Nevada, Iowa, Nevada, Iowa, Nevada.
Most people will be too nice to correct him, but
they'll all tell someone about the stranger who spoke of
Nevada like some weird other place. Yes, that is that
(01:47:32):
is the truth clock tower. A store in Tulsa, Oklahoma
had a sign like this saying to watch your inventory
next to the public restroom with all the common ingredients
and a store a store in Tulsa, oh I can't
(01:47:54):
show it to you over there either, damn it, all
of the ingredients and matt and it. And I asked
a a pharmacist one time because I was buying sudafed
or one of those things, and we got into a
conversation about why why you had to sign for it
(01:48:18):
and and and the and the UH and all of
the ingredients that you needed to make meth. And she
was telling me, she said, one of the reasons that
meth labs would blow up is because they use myriadic
acid and battery acid. And I think there's a there's
a difference, but there and when you look at the
(01:48:41):
ingredients of meth, there's acid tone, there's draino, there's rubbing alcohol,
there's a sudafed motrin. The what's the stuff you put
in the engine, the heat it's a you put it
in your gasoline. It's a it's a fuel additive. Their
starter fluid, which is ether. You've got rock salt. But
(01:49:05):
it's no wonder all this stuff blows.
Speaker 4 (01:49:07):
Up, and especially the battles, Like why, how would you
think you're making a battery met lab. I guess you are.
Speaker 3 (01:49:12):
I mean, yeah, that's why they blow up. That's it's exactly.
And and I don't know if that is what happened,
because there was a huge explosion yesterday of the North
Carolina the one that happened in North Carolina. The the
car that drove into this one, I think, I actually oh,
(01:49:33):
and then and then of course there was the explosion
of the Boeing airplane. This is the always this is
what a car drove into a veterinary clinic in North Carolina.
Oh my gosh. Now, fortunately the veterinary clinic was under construction,
(01:49:57):
and uh they the car that drove into it actually
fractured the gas line that was going to this new
veterinary clinic and it wasn't open. They were able to
get in there and get everybody, I guess the construction
workers out before the thing blew up. There were three
firefighters injured in the blast, but for the most part,
(01:50:18):
and it was a hit and run to the person
who drove into the building and fractured the gas line
took off from the scene, although they had for some reason.
And it's weird that the security videos worked around this place.
I mean, it's not like the Epstein videos, but they
(01:50:41):
worked and they were able to track down the.
Speaker 9 (01:50:45):
Car.
Speaker 3 (01:50:45):
All right, what do you want to tell you?
Speaker 4 (01:50:46):
No, I thank you for indulging me. I wanted to
tie in our thumbnail to this story because I want
to get your opinion on it. Story came out yesterday.
I guess it was our early this morning that a
new law in Washington State is now requiring clergy, especially
(01:51:06):
priests after confession, to notify people about confessions that are illegal.
For example, if someone comes into confession and they confess
that they've been molesting children, now the clergy are required
(01:51:27):
in Washington State.
Speaker 3 (01:51:29):
To report that priests confessing to priest.
Speaker 4 (01:51:31):
No priests having to tell them. But here's the thing
you said. The Catholic Church has announced that they will
excommunicate priests for doing that. What are your thoughts on that.
I'm just curious because confessions has it's like the doctor
patient privilege. Clergy and your followers, that's always been secretive, right.
(01:51:59):
This is the first state, I think, in the US
to do this. It's not law, I mean, says the
Catholic Church announced that priests will be excommunicated if they
follow a new Washington state law requiring clergy to report
confessions about child abuse to law enforcement. What are your
thoughts there. I'm just curious. I'm not Catholic, so I
(01:52:21):
don't go to confession, but we do have Catholics in
the audience, And I'm curious as.
Speaker 2 (01:52:26):
To what.
Speaker 3 (01:52:30):
Wade Robertson says. Oh, bullshit, they've been keeping that stuff
a secret forever.
Speaker 4 (01:52:36):
I'm not disagreeing with you.
Speaker 3 (01:52:40):
I'm so wait a second, So Washington State.
Speaker 4 (01:52:43):
Yeah, it's let's see, let's if I can find it.
The new law signed by Democrat Governor Bob Ferguson last
week added quote members of the clergy to a list
of professionals who are required to report information that relates
to child abuse or neglect to law enforcement. And the
measure does not provide an exception for information offered in
(01:53:04):
a confessional.
Speaker 3 (01:53:08):
But it's also been blocked by a federal court.
Speaker 4 (01:53:11):
But the Catholic Church says they'll excommunicate priests for following
that law.
Speaker 3 (01:53:16):
Well, there is no law yet.
Speaker 4 (01:53:20):
That's just I saw the reporting on it this morning,
and I thought, you know what, that's probably a point
of contention with Catholics. And I'm not saying it's a
good point of contention. I'm not arguing one way or
the other. I'm just saying, is it is it? It would?
I guess it would be similar to making a law
(01:53:42):
that says your doctor now has to report you know,
if you go in and say I'm smoking pot, because
you can tell your doctor that you're smoking pot, and
relatively speaking, they're not. They can't say that to law enforcement,
especially in states at all. But there are other things, right,
(01:54:06):
So I'm just curious.
Speaker 3 (01:54:07):
I'm not aware of that within the within the medical community. Now,
there's attorney client privilege, but I don't think anything.
Speaker 4 (01:54:16):
Well even if what okay, what if that was effected,
what if a law was generated that that made attorneys
that that would put every attorney out of business.
Speaker 3 (01:54:26):
That's not going to happen. That's not going to happen
because you have attorneys.
Speaker 4 (01:54:30):
And it's all I would say. It's similar to attorneys
being required to report certain crimes. But at the same time,
the bar association going, if you report them, we will
take your license away. So you're kind of stuck between
a rock and a hard spot. If you're a priest
in Washington State, you're stuck.
Speaker 3 (01:54:55):
So it's basically the it's it revokes any protection.
Speaker 4 (01:55:02):
Do you become an accessory if you don't report it.
It's just uh, I look, I'm not okay with child abuse.
I'm not. And so there are gonna be people who
argue for it under the child abuse stance, and there
are gonna be people who argue against it because of
(01:55:24):
the confessional. It just seems like it is the spot
to be.
Speaker 3 (01:55:35):
M Yeah, Wade robertson confession, you're confessing your sins to Jesus.
Be a real Christian Catholic. Yeah, that's and see, that's
the problem is that you are if you really want
to get down to confession, do you confess to God?
Speaker 8 (01:55:52):
Not to.
Speaker 3 (01:55:54):
I can't not to A priest can't say I disagree.
And that's where I'm at odds with the Catholic Church
to begin with.
Speaker 4 (01:56:03):
Most people, because there's people who are not Catholic, are
at odds with the Catholic Church.
Speaker 3 (01:56:07):
Yes, otherwise you'd be Catholic. There shouldn't be a roadblock
between you and God. There shouldn't be a Bible tells
you that I have to know more.
Speaker 4 (01:56:27):
Yeah, you said that, you said that that law has
been blocked though that wasn't in the story.
Speaker 3 (01:56:31):
Yeah, that was back in July though, and the whole
thing started off in May that that became They originally
wanted to do that. May see the thirteen says yes,
but you should, but you should tell I'm Catholic, that's
(01:56:52):
the guilt, while people up, I don't. That's a good
And where's that we're the church and state separation people.
Speaker 4 (01:57:07):
Well, if it continues to be pushed, you'll hear it
from them.
Speaker 3 (01:57:11):
Yeah, and there you have it. Wait a minutes less
go just waiting for your coat?
Speaker 9 (01:57:16):
Let me go.
Speaker 3 (01:57:17):
There is an interesting, interesting way to wrap up the program.
There two hours of audio deliciousness and conundrums known as
the Daily Mojo for today?
Speaker 4 (01:57:26):
What is today?
Speaker 3 (01:57:27):
Wednesday, homday the Year of our the twentieth day of August,
Year of Our Lord, twenty twenty five. Let's see if
anybody learned a damn thing during the uh course of
the program, missy thirteenth, it's interesting to think about, right,
not my dogs. Like everything else, they get their foot
in the door via particularly vile accusations. Right, it's for
(01:57:48):
the children. And then again i'd have to know more
about exactly what it is. Um and uh mama bear
seven thirty one says, doctors do ask you if you
have a gun in the home. Yes, and that's just it.
Speaker 4 (01:58:02):
Yeah, but can they report it?
Speaker 3 (01:58:04):
Let's say you're not supposed to have Yeah, they can
report it.
Speaker 4 (01:58:06):
Can they or will they?
Speaker 3 (01:58:07):
Yes, there's nothing that there's nothing that prevents a doctor
from from telling an authority as a matter a matter
of fact, they're required to, I think, And I'm not
even saying that because I'm not sure. Uh let's see here,
Beaver says, I am torn on this. I understand the confidentiality,
but if there's a child in danger because he is
(01:58:28):
being abused, it's a want to do something about it.
Speaker 4 (01:58:31):
Anyway, it's a tough place to be. If you're a priest.
It's a tough place to be because we all land
on one side or the other out here. But if
you're a priest, it's a tough place to be.
Speaker 3 (01:58:41):
But if you're a priest confessing, okay, would it violate
the First Amendment to ask a priest to say anything
in confession? Ah?
Speaker 6 (01:58:53):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (01:58:54):
See, as the college says, it's let's go overhere to
the let's see if this. Let's see if this button works. Ah,
that one did, Greg, So I didn't. I didn't take it.
Was not convinced, fakere real Pope Preview thirty eighth. If
I was you, I'd go to my local health food
store and talk to them. They usually know a lot.
(01:59:15):
Thank you, nice job. Ron, frankly speaking, says right, thank god,
bless everyone, and have a great day, real pope freebe
to thirty eighth. So so a problem, really, just think
of anything, Just think of annoying. I don't know any
idea what the hell that says? Day eighty day all
And don't let the stupids getting your way, says the
(01:59:35):
balld ape. Right if you say so, I'm not sure
exactly in any of it, Ron will be having confession laters.
Speaker 4 (01:59:45):
Okay.
Speaker 3 (01:59:46):
As for the rest of you, remember that we the
people must hang together, otherwise we shall surely hang separately.
Six scepert rrendus, resist stupid, don't eat your prime ministers.
That's also something you learned to day. Good night, doc Doms.
Speaker 4 (02:00:00):
Wherever you are Sea Wash.
Speaker 3 (02:00:02):
Listen at the Dailymojo dot com
Speaker 9 (02:00:08):
M